Posted on Wednesday, Sep 17th, 2008 | Categories: Stories |

A helicopter flies overhead as Pat Sanders boils water in front of this home in Galveston, Texas, Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2008. Officials are urging residents to leave the island hit by hurricane Ike but Sanders, a life long resident, had vowed to stay put with his family. Sanders is cooking the meat from his freezer as it thaws and has stored supplies and water to last for weeks. (AP Photo/LM Otero)AP - Residents trying to get back to this hurricane-ravaged city Wednesday spent hours fuming in gridlocked traffic, only to be turned away at the bridge by officials worried that the crippled island can’t accommodate that many people.

Traffic backed up for 20 miles along Interstate 45, the one route onto Galveston Island, with residents jockeying for position with utility workers, repair crews and police trying to begin repairs to the city wrecked by Hurricane Ike five days ago.

The city announced Tuesday that people could briefly return under a new "look and leave" plan, causing evacuees all over the state to pack up and head for the coast.

Hours later, it abruptly halted the policy, but some in the long line Wednesday angrily complained they’d never heard the policy was rescinded.

"I don’t understand this," Carlos Azucena said, motioning toward repair workers after waiting in line three hours before he was rejected in his third try to go home. "You see those other people. They don’t even live here; I live in Galveston."

Ike’s death toll in the U.S. hit 50 Wednesday and appeared to level off in Texas, where search teams pulled out of Galveston having searched the entire island for survivors. The task force had checked on almost 6,000 people and performed more than 3,500 rescues since Friday. Seventeen people have died in the state.

In Houston, most of the nation’s fourth-largest city was still without power and people were still lining up at dozens of distribution centers for basic needs. In his second stop in the state since Ike, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said distribution of food and water was going smoothly.

"I’m happy to see that things are moving there," said Chertoff, who also reviewed operations at FEMA’s primary distribution center. "We will continue to make sure the flow to the (centers) works uninterrupted."

His appearance came a day after local officials complained that supplies were slow in getting to distribution points, and that the entire process had glitches.

Emergency utility crews were among the long line trudging toward Galveston, and the crowd of residents was only delaying repairs, officials said.

"It’s not a good scenario," said Raquelle Lewis, a Texas Department of Transportation spokeswoman. Read more...

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