Water main break floods woman’s home in East Little York neighborhood ahead of freeze


HOUSTON, Texas (KTRK) — As temperatures start to drop in southeast Texas, a Houston-area woman’s home took on water, but not due to the weather conditions.

ABC13 got a call into the newsroom Thursday morning when Angela Reed said water was shooting up over her house from a water main break in the East Little York neighborhood.

“Well at first I called the city. I heard the water this morning and I figured, ‘It’s raining.’ I looked in the backyard, ‘It’s not raining back there,'” Reed said. “So I looked out and saw the gusher coming over, in the house. I mean, hitting the house, hitting the house.”

Reed said what started as a leak in the 6210 block of Moss Oaks Drive erupted into a geyser of water around 5 a.m. Thursday.

At the home, ABC13 reporter Courtney Fischer got an inside look at the flooding. Courtney was live at Reed’s home as water slammed the roof in the Eyewitness News at 7 a.m. streaming newscast. You can watch her report in the video player above.

“I called them back. ‘OK, my house is flooding now,'” Reed said.

Reed said the city said someone would be sent at 8 a.m.

“But, my house is flooding. I need someone to come turn the water off,” she told the city.

Edward McFarland, the neighbor across the street where the water main break started, said he called public works on Monday to report what was, at that time, a small leak.

He said the city sent a crew to check his meters, but nothing was done about the leak. He said he called them again on Wednesday to let them know it was still leaking.

The city confirmed to ABC13 that crews checked the leak on Monday, but “decided it was not considered an emergency leak.”

When something is considered non-emergency, it can take days for it to be fixed. Though now that a home is flooding, the city considers the main break an emergency repair.

Now, three days since the first call, a home was flooded as Texas braces for a freeze.

“What I told them this morning, when I called them this morning, ‘I would think. An emergency is an emergency. Someone should be here by now,'” McFarland said. “It’s just that simple. Someone should have been here by now.”

Inside Reed’s home, water soaked the carpet in two bedrooms. Water pummeled the roof for hours.

According to Houston public works, the city does not typically pay for damages to homes unless they were directly caused by a worker.

Reed can file a claim through the city of Houston to see if anything can be done.

Crews said the repair was completed just after 11 a.m.

RELATED: Crash with fire hydrant sparked main break in northwest Houston, neighbor says

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