‘Please Heed Warnings’ on Evacuations, Texas Gov. Cautions

CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas β€” Coastal Texas counties have ordered thousands of residents to leave, oil workers are fleeing the Gulf of Mexico, and at least one college campus has closed as Hurricane Harvey looms.

Forecasters and officials warned the storm, predicted to be the fiercest to hit the United States in 12 years, posed life-threatening risks.

“It’s hard to imagine just how horrific and destructive this amount of water will be, but it goes without saying that anyone who has decided to stay in a low-lying area is risking their lives and those lives of first responders,” MSNBC meteorologist Bill Karins said Friday.

Related: Hurricane Harvey Intensifies to Category 2 as It Roars Toward Texas

State transportation officials were considering turning all evacuation routes from coastal areas into one-way roads headed inland, but had not done so as of Friday afternoon. Traffic appeared to be flowing smoothly as of Friday morning.

But officials asked drivers to only travel if necessary.

“Expect heavy volumes of traffic in this area. Please avoid non-essential travel around here to help people get to safety,” the San Antonio transportation department tweeted.

Image: Motorists pass a warning sign as Hurricane Harvey approaches the Gulf Coast area Image: Motorists pass a warning sign as Hurricane Harvey approaches the Gulf Coast area

Motorists pass a warning sign as Hurricane Harvey approaches the Gulf Coast area in Corpus Christi, Texas on Aug. 25, 2017. Eric Gay / AP

Mandatory evacuations have been issued for the following counties, according to NBC affiliate KPRC in Houston:

  • Brazoria County: Gulf side of Intracoastal Canal
  • Calhoun County
  • Jackson County
  • Matagorda County: No one allowed to return to FM 2031 (Beach Road in Matagorda) after 10:00 a.m. Friday until evacuation order is set aside
  • Refugio County
  • San Patricio County
  • Victoria County: Curfew in effect from 10 p.m. Friday to 6 a.m. Saturday
  • Aransas Pass
  • Ingleside
  • Mathis
  • Port Aransas
  • Port Lavaca
  • Portland
  • Robstown
  • Rockport

Voluntary evacuations were issued for many other counties, including low-lying coastal areas of Brazoria and Galveston counties.

In Port Lavaca, police loaded residents who didn’t have cars or couldn’t leave for others reasons onto buses, knocking on doors early in the morning to make sure all homes had been checked.

In Corpus Christi, where a voluntary evacuation was issued, Dyandra Ysassi, 28, said she was staying put to work at her job at the Aloft Hotel, about a mile from the coast.

“I don’t know what to expect. I’m just going to stay calm,” she told NBC News. Ysassi didn’t want to abandon her co-workers but her whole family had evacuated to San Antonio.

“They told me they loved me, be careful, just always have your phone on you. Stay safe, stay here, don’t drive,” she said, adding that it was her first day on the job at the hotel, which opened for the first time Thursday.

Frank Veltri, 82, has lived in Corpus Christi for 40 years. He and his wife live six blocks from the water and opted not to evacuate but, on Friday, he was looking to stay at a hotel further inland.

“Our concern was that if we lose electricity and we didn’t have air conditioning or lights, it can be pretty bad. You never know. We thought, stay on the safe side, don’t travel 150 miles and worry about congestion on the highway. Maybe a better alternative was to book a safe place in Corpus,” he said.

Others in Corpus Christi weren’t taking chances. Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi shuttered its campus, delaying students’ move-in until at least Sunday afternoon, depending on “on whether or not the campus is subject to any damage or utility outages.”

At Driscoll Children’s Hospital in Corpus Christi, at least 10 critically ill babies were flown Thursday more than 400 miles north to Cook Children’s Medical Center in Fort Worth.

“They made a wise decision to get them out as quickly as possible,” Debbie Boudreaux, director of transport for Cook Children’s, told NBC Dallas-Fort Worth. “The problem keeping them there is the ventilation system they’re on, the lifesaving ventilator, would not be able to be maintained without electricity.”

And in the town of Rockport, about 20 miles outside Corpus Christi, 90 residents of the Park Manor skilled nursing facility were evacuated Thursday night to a sister facility in Bee Cave, near Austin.

Meanwhile, in the Gulf of Mexico, Royal Dutch Shell, Anadarko Petroleum and Exxon Mobil curbed production and evacuated personnel.

Royal Dutch Shell evacuated its 22-well Perdido oil and gas hub, the deepest floating oil platform on the planet, the company said. It was one of 39 production platforms β€” more than 5 percent of all manned platforms in the Gulf β€” that had been evacuated by Thursday afternoon, according to the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement, an agency of the U.S. Interior Department.

Already a Category 2 hurricane, Harvey was barreling toward Texas and is expected to make landfall just east of Corpus Christi at around 1 a.m. local time Saturday.

With projected rainfall of up to 3 feet, the hurricane is expected to leave historic flooding in its wake. Eight million people are under hurricane warnings, and about 735,000 are under tropical storm warnings.

“A lot of people are taking this storm for granted, thinking it may not pose much of a danger to them,” Texas Gov. Greg Abbott told KPRC. “Please heed warnings and evacuate as soon as possible.”

Phil McCausland reported from Corpus Christi, Texas. Elizabeth Chuck reported from New York.