Moving from North Carolina to Spring on July 6, resident Nermeen Hassan said she had no idea how to prepare for a hurricane or how it would impact her neighborhood, Roundhill of Cypress Station.

Two days later, on July 8, Hurricane Beryl swept through the Greater Houston area, leaving Hassan—and more than 2.2 million other CenterPoint customers in the Houston area—without power and with limited supplies.

“I don’t know ... what we will do to manage. ... Everything in my life is on hold right now,” Hassan said via a July 9 Facebook message. “A big tree has fallen in front of my house. [There’s] nothing to cook with, no internet to work, no power—we are living ... [primitively, and] nobody knows for how long.”

Robert Logan, assistant fire chief for the Spring Fire Department, said as of July 9 that SFD had responded to 300 calls from Beryl, including downed trees, power lines and transformers as well as gas leaks. SFD leaders prepared for the storm by adding 25% more staff to the emergency response teams, and preparing additional trucks and equipment.

“There [were] many times that we had just about every single crew on an incident,” he said.
What happened?


Hurricane Beryl initially formed as a tropical depression over the Atlantic Ocean on June 28 before strengthening into the first hurricane of the 2024 Atlantic hurricane season the following day, according to the National Weather Service. The hurricane traveled through the Gulf of Mexico before turning northeast and making landfall for the third time July 8 as a Category 1 hurricane near Matagorda.

In Harris County, the highest wind speeds were recorded near the University of Houston with gusts reaching as high as 89 mph on July 8, according to the NWS.

According to data provided by The Citizen Weather Observer Program, wind speeds reached as high as 58 mph in Spring.

​​Additionally, Beryl dropped 7.2 inches of rain in the Spring area and as much as 14.9 inches in some areas in Harris County, per NWS data.
The impact


At least eight people have died in Texas as a result of Hurricane Beryl, including seven in the Greater Houston area, as of July 9, local emergency management and state officials said.

“Our hearts grieve for all the Texans impacted by Hurricane Beryl, including our fellow Texans who tragically lost their lives or were injured,” Gov. Greg Abbott said in a statement July 9.

In a July 9 news conference, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick said more than 2.2 million residents in the Greater Houston area were still without power after the storm toppled 10 power transmission lines in addition to a bevy of trees and power distribution lines throughout the area. As of press time July 11, service had been restored to about half of those facing power outages.

“While we tracked the projected path, intensity and timing for Hurricane Beryl closely for many days, this storm proved the unpredictability of hurricanes as it delivered a powerful blow across our service territory and impacted a lot of lives,” said Lynnae Wilson, senior vice president for CenterPoint Energy.


Internet and phone service was interrupted by the storm as well. ​​Data provided by Comcast showed around 420,000 Xfinity and Comcast business customers’ service had been temporarily interrupted by Beryl’s impact on southeast Texas as of July 8. Officials from AT&T said July 8 that major network facilities were online, with some running on backup power; however, customers in affected areas were experiencing service interruptions due to storm damage and commercial power outages.

What’s next

Thomas Gleeson, chair of the Public Utility Commission of Texas, said state agencies will work with local utility companies to strengthen infrastructure against future disasters.

“I look at every one of these storms as a chance for us to review what we’ve done and try to get better at our preparation, our response,” he said.


Tom Overbye, who serves as the director of Texas A&M University’s Smart Grid Center, said there will be an investigation with the PUCT to figure out what went wrong.

“When we build distribution circuits, there’s standards. One of the standards is the distribution line should withstand 110 mph wind when I don’t think Beryl had wind at that speed. That surely will be an issue that the investigations will come look and say, ‘Why did so many people lose electricity?’” he said.

On July 8, President Joe Biden approved a disaster declaration for Texas that will provide federal assistance for debris removal and emergency protective measures, according to a July 9 news release from the Texas Division of Emergency Management.

The emergency declaration will grant 75% reimbursement for debris cleanup for affected counties, TDEM Chief Nim Kidd said during a July 9 news conference.


“Our community has been battered over the past few months, and this [declaration] is a big ray of hope for us,” Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo said in a July 9 post on Facebook.

Residents who sustained damage from the storm can report it through the Individual State of Texas Assessment Tool, by visiting https://damage.tdem.texas.gov.

Contributions by Jovanna Aguilar, Vanessa Holt, Jessica Shorten, Haley Velasco & Aubrey Vogel