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Texas
Related: About this forum"Now Is the Time to Take Action": Carbon Monoxide Poisonings After Hurricane Beryl Are the Highest Since ...
https://www.propublica.org/article/texas-hurricane-beryl-carbon-monoxide-poisoningsNow Is the Time to Take Action: Carbon Monoxide Poisonings After Hurricane Beryl Are the Highest Since Texas Winter Storm
ProPublica / by Lexi Churchill / Aug 5, 2024 at 6:52 AM
[...]
This article is co-published with The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan local newsroom that informs and engages with Texans. Sign up for The Brief Weekly to get up to speed on their essential coverage of Texas issues.
Texas lawmakers nearly three years ago promised changes to prevent the devastation from a deadly winter storm from happening again. But the damage caused by Hurricane Beryl last month shows that much remains the same, particularly when it comes to preventing carbon monoxide poisoning.
Roughly 400 Texans landed in emergency rooms for CO poisoning after Hurricane Beryl pummeled the state on July 8, marking the highest numbers since the 2021 winter storm, state data shows. Two people died of CO poisoning in Harris County, according to Texas Division of Emergency Management Chief W. Nim Kidd. (The county Medical Examiners Office has not yet confirmed the deaths.)
[...]
The family did not have a CO detector. Nothing in state law required them to. At the time of the 2021 winter storm, Texas was one of six states with no statewide requirement for CO detectors in homes. State lawmakers later updated building codes to require them in new and renovated homes starting in 2022 but allowed cities to opt out. Though more than half of states require the alarms in some or all existing residences, Texas does not, excluding millions of homes and apartments.
[...]
Measures to prevent CO poisoning have also been slow at the federal level and in the county that was most hard hit during the two major outages.
[..._]
Perla Trevizo contributed reporting
ProPublica / by Lexi Churchill / Aug 5, 2024 at 6:52 AM
[...]
This article is co-published with The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan local newsroom that informs and engages with Texans. Sign up for The Brief Weekly to get up to speed on their essential coverage of Texas issues.
Texas lawmakers nearly three years ago promised changes to prevent the devastation from a deadly winter storm from happening again. But the damage caused by Hurricane Beryl last month shows that much remains the same, particularly when it comes to preventing carbon monoxide poisoning.
Roughly 400 Texans landed in emergency rooms for CO poisoning after Hurricane Beryl pummeled the state on July 8, marking the highest numbers since the 2021 winter storm, state data shows. Two people died of CO poisoning in Harris County, according to Texas Division of Emergency Management Chief W. Nim Kidd. (The county Medical Examiners Office has not yet confirmed the deaths.)
[...]
The family did not have a CO detector. Nothing in state law required them to. At the time of the 2021 winter storm, Texas was one of six states with no statewide requirement for CO detectors in homes. State lawmakers later updated building codes to require them in new and renovated homes starting in 2022 but allowed cities to opt out. Though more than half of states require the alarms in some or all existing residences, Texas does not, excluding millions of homes and apartments.
[...]
Measures to prevent CO poisoning have also been slow at the federal level and in the county that was most hard hit during the two major outages.
[..._]
Perla Trevizo contributed reporting
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"Now Is the Time to Take Action": Carbon Monoxide Poisonings After Hurricane Beryl Are the Highest Since ... (Original Post)
sl8
Aug 2024
OP
Dayyam ! People, you gotta VENT those emergency generators away from the house ! nt
eppur_se_muova
Aug 2024
#1
eppur_se_muova
(37,671 posts)1. Dayyam ! People, you gotta VENT those emergency generators away from the house ! nt
LetMyPeopleVote
(155,603 posts)2. Centerpoint's negligence killed people