Showing posts with label 05. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 05. Show all posts

Monday, December 05, 2005

MS-13 still a problem for PA

Port Arthur's MS-13 street gang has adopted the name associated with violent Salvadorian gangs, which are rapidly spreading across America. However, this gang is not as violent or organized yet. The gang returned after Hurricane Rita and still poses a serious threat for the citizens and police of Port Arthur.


Photos by Mark M. Hancock / © The Beaumont Enterprise

Port Arthur police officer Marcelo Molfino, a first-generation Latino-American whose family is from Uruguay, listens to the gang-related complaints of a home owner in Port Arthur on Thursday, July 21, 2005.


A scar remains where a bullet tore through a handrail section outside Johnny Costanzo's home in Port Arthur. The bullet missed his house and lodged into a neighbor's home.


A gang member shows his tattoos in Port Arthur. The numbers one and three on his shoulders can be read as 13, which is the gang's symbol.


Johnny Costanzo talks about the rise of gang violence outside his Port Arthur home. Several bullets have been fired into his house.


A gang member shows his tattoo in Port Arthur. The "XIII" is the Roman numeral for 13, which is the gang's symbol.


Port Arthur police officer Patrick Arnett gets passionate about fighting crime and gangs in Port Arthur.


Graffiti "tags" abound on buildings in Port Arthur. Gang members paint the tags to mark their turf or communicate messages to other gang members.


Port Arthur police officers Marcelo Molfino (left) and Patrick Arnett (right) talk about crime trends in Port Arthur.

Related stories originally by Dee Dixon.

Award winner: 2nd Place, Photo Essay, Press Club of Southeast Texas, Excellence in Media Awards

Saturday, November 26, 2005

Denied


West Brook High School's Will Wilson (No. 31, right) uses his head to deflect a pass intended for Clear Creek High School's Austin Yancy (No. 17, left) during a playoff football game at Galena Park ISD Stadium in Houston on Saturday, Nov. 19, 2005.

Mark M. Hancock / © The Beaumont Enterprise

Friday, November 25, 2005

Beaumont carnival


Photos by Mark M. Hancock / © The Beaumont Enterprise

Carnival attendees scream as they ride the YoYo at the Todd Armstrong Shows, Inc. carnival in the parking lot of Parkdale Mall in Beaumont on Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2005.


Tekedra Holland, 17, (left) and her cousin Troyvon Tillman, 3, take a play plane ride at the Todd Armstrong Shows, Inc. carnival in the parking lot of Parkdale Mall in Beaumont.
 

Thursday, November 24, 2005

Thanksgiving


Photos by Mark M. Hancock / © The Beaumont Enterprise

Cherise Williams, 4, (right) licks her lips as her grandmother Sarah Williams (left) prepares a turkey during Indian Day at the Indian Village Assembly of God church near the Alabama-Coushatta reservation on Sunday, Nov. 20, 2005.


Judy Williams prepares Indian fry bread during Indian Day at the Indian Village Assembly of God church near the Alabama-Coushatta reservation.

(Right) Sage Williams, 6, calls for a stray dog as he waits for lunch during Indian Day at the Indian Village Assembly of God church in Livingston.

(Below) The Rev. Rudy Martinez keeps an eye on everyone as he gets food during Indian Day at the Indian Village Assembly of God church.




Angel Beene (right) feeds her son Seth Williams, 21 months, (left) during Indian Day at the Indian Village Assembly of God church near the Alabama-Coushatta reservation.


Church attendees share a meal during Indian Day at the Indian Village Assembly of God church.


Church members sing gospel songs in the sanctuary during Indian Day at the Indian Village Assembly of God church near the Alabama-Coushatta reservation.

Please also see my Thanksgiving story and Fayrouz's take on the event on her blog.

Friday, November 18, 2005

Hometown homecoming

Brookeland is a kindergarten-through-12 school in rural Southeast Texas. Last year, they had seven graduating seniors. This year they expect 12. As such, they don't have a football team. However, they take great pride in their basketball team.

Before basketball season officially starts each year, they celebrate homecoming. It's akin to homecomings of yesteryear. The entire community is invited and involved in the celebration.


Photos by Mark M. Hancock / © The Beaumont Enterprise

(Above) Harleigh Sepulvavo, 6, (right) waits restlessly for the Queen's Court to begin with her father Durk Sepulvavo during homecoming activities at the school in Brookeland on Thursday, Nov. 10, 2005.

(Right) Ryan Whitmire, 6, blows a whistle on his boutonierre during homecoming activities in Brookeland.



(Above) Kindergartener Hunter Spring (right) checks out the trophy of Queen's Court kindergarten dutchess Autumn Murray (left) during homecoming activities in Brookeland.

(Right) Brookeland High School cheerleaders mingle on a trailer near the traditional bon fire during homecoming activities in Brookeland.
 

Sunday, November 13, 2005

Aaron Brannen, state champion

Aaron Brannen lost his mother to pneumonia. Still, he persevered, practiced and became the Texas State Champion cross country runner.


Photos by Mark M. Hancock / © The Beaumont Enterprise


(Above) Aaron Brannen practices with the 3A cross country team at Bridge City High School in Bridge City.

(Right) Aaron Brannen stretches before practice with the Cardinals cross country team at Bridge City High School.


Aaron Brannen and Sean Aucoin listen to "Breakdown" by Jack Johnson together during lunch at Bridge City High School.


Aaron Brannen (left) waits for instructions from Dedra Morris (right) in the assistant principals office during his period as an office messenger at Bridge City High School.


Aaron Brannen checks information on a board during an English lecture at Bridge City High School.


Aaron Brannen practices guitar while waiting on instant messages from his friends in his room at his father's home in Port Arthur.




(Above) Aaron Brannen (right) listens as Ricky Brennan, his father, (left) reads cross country predictions from a Web site at his father's home in Port Arthur.

(Left) Bridge City High School's Aaron Brannen keeps the lead during the regional cross country track meet in Humble. He won the meet and advanced to the state championships, which he also won.


Award Winner:   2nd place, Web site, Best Sports Picture Story (Unaffiliated Sites), National Press Photographers Association 2006 Best of Photojournalism competition.
 

Tuesday, November 08, 2005

Football jubilation


Earl Thomas celebrates after scoring a touchdown against Anahuac at Mustang Stadium in West Orange on Thursday, Oct. 13, 2005. It was the first day for high school football to return to Southeast Texas after Hurricane Rita.

Photos by Mark M. Hancock / © The Beaumont Enterprise


Award winner:   3rd Place, Sports Photo, Press Club of Southeast Texas, Excellence in Media Awards.
 

Thursday, October 27, 2005

Cameron, La.

Towns along the Gulf Coast of Southwest Louisiana have suffered different shades of damage from Hurricane Rita. In Cameron, many buildings remain, but almost all are damaged beyond repair. Many homes were pushed off their foundations and the remaining shells block roadways. Demolition is a certainty for most of the city.


A doll remains trapped under a board in Cameron, La. on Thursday, Oct. 27, 2005. The city was devastated by Hurricane Rita's storm surge.


Photos by Mark M. Hancock / © The Beaumont Enterprise


A dead alligator rots in a drainage ditch near Cameron Elementary School in Cameron. Only the framework of the auditorium remains.


The Cameron Parish Library remains completely destroyed in Cameron. Pieces of the city's elementary school gymnasium remain in the background.


A shrimp truck remains damaged and abandoned in Cameron. Similar trucks were strewn throughout the area.


The gymnasium of the First Baptist Church in Cameron remains damaged and filled with broken pews and other debris.


A statue seems to fend off the ocean at Our Lady Star of the Sea Catholic church.

For additional coverage, please see Hurricane Rita's toll on SW Louisiana or Mark's Hurricane Rita visual timeline.
 

Monday, October 24, 2005

Mark-O-Rita


Mark M. Hancock / © The Beaumont Enterprise
Port Arthur police S.W.A.T. teams prepare to secure the city after Hurricane Rita hit on Saturday, Sept. 24, 2005.

When Hurricane Rita crashed into Southeast Texas and Southwest Louisiana on Saturday, Sept. 24, 2005, it was the third-strongest hurricane in recorded history. Damage estimates top $8 billion.

The proud people of this area immediately got to work repairing and replacing what they could. However, many hard-working folks lost homes, businesses or both. Some communities simply vanished and only memories and mortgages for toxic sand remain.

I suggest donating to The Salvation Army. It would do the most good. We're working to find a more efficient donation system for the folks in this area who will need help for many months.

The majority of Hurricane Rita images appear in the September and October 2005 archives. Below is a list of individual posts or viewers can see the entire months' work by clicking on the linked words in the previous sentence.

Please use the Back button on your browser to return to this page.
20 Sept. - Tuesday
Pre-Rita run on Wal-Mart
Krogering for supplies

21 Sept. - Wednesday
Hurricane Rita (text)
Patience at Home Depot
Leaving home

22 Sept. - Thursday
Mini Rita update (text)
Police help evacuate
Special needs evacuation
The calm before the storm

23 Sept. - Friday
Braced for Hurricane Rita
Braced for Hurricane Rita continued
Watching Hurricane Rita

24 Sept. - Saturday
Hurricane Rita hits
Hurricane Rita aftermath: Beaumont
Hurricane Rita aftermath: Port Arthur
Vidor post-Rita
Mauriceville feed and grain

25 Sept. - Sunday
No mass after Rita
Trying to help his neighbors
Untangling after Rita
Crystal clear damage
Beaumont emergency center
Ford Park: formerly shelter from Katrina
Market Basket's conditional opening
O'Hare's helps after looted
Fuel arrives before power

26 Sept. - Monday
Fuel line wait
Tornado damage during hurricane
Airport heavy metal
Testing communication
Sandwiched
Damage is clear from above
Orange hit hard
Clean and secure
Shrimp boats

Sept. 27 - Tuesday
Temporary communication
Mauriceville Red Cross shelter closes
Bridge City
Sunk shrimp boat
Port Neches
Groves
Nederland Windmolen

Sept. 28 - Wednesday
Salvation Army feeds Beaumont
Recovery continues in Beaumont
More Beaumont damage

Sept. 29 - Thursday
Parkdale Mall activity
Post office wait
Lake Charles, La. suffers storm surge
Vinton motel closed
Boomtown post-Rita
Port Arthur neighborhoods sealed
Port Arthur's "Best-kept lawn"

Sept. 30 - Friday
Self reliant
FEMA goes house-to-house
Free flat repairs
Clear Channel team coverage
Chainsaw sharpener
Looters sent to hell
Trash deposit center

Oct. 1 - Saturday
We're surviving, but tired (text)
Rebuilding Target
SBM chainsaw ministries
Park crew

Oct. 2 - Sunday
Still going... (text)
Hungry hummingbirds
Morning activities
Working despite losses
Elks Lodge fire

Oct. 3 - Monday
Hurricane Rita's aftermath - one day's work

Oct. 4 - Tuesday
Abundantly blessed
Mail returns to Silsbee
Brooks Brothers does its best
Rita survivor T-shirts

Oct. 5 - Wednesday
Bank's reopen
Lion's Carnival
Bayou ecological damage

Oct. 6 - Thursday
Buna VFD
Bleakwood: A Red Cross success
Bon Wier VFD: no immunity

Oct. 7 - Friday
After-Rita funeral

Oct. 8 - Saturday
Hamshire VFD survival celebration
Sabine Pass
Spraying into the night
Chainsaw sunset
Emergency food

Oct. 9 - Sunday
Taking a breather (text)

Oct. 11 - Tuesday
Working against two hazards

Oct. 12 - Wednesday
Log loader
Meat juice
Found dog
Beaumont evacuees return

Oct. 13 - Thursday
Souvenirs
Tired

Oct. 20 - Thursday
How to cover hurricanes (text)

Oct. 21 - Friday
Holly Beach, La. is gone

Oct. 24
Holly Beach isn't there (text)

Oct. 27
Cameron, La.
Oak Grove, La.
Holly Beach drainage ditch
Johnson's Bayou, La.

Nov. 16
Texas Highway 87

Nov. 23
"Rita Captured" is available

Nov. 24
Displaced Thanksgiving

Nov. 26
Cameron two months later

Dec. 7
Silsbee library setback

Dec. 15
Bryan's 797 chefs

Dec. 20
Happy Birthday

Dec. 22
Forgotten Rita evacuees

Dec. 24
FEMA Christmas

Dec. 27
Cameron three months later

Jan. 6
Shangri La Gardents post Rita

Jan. 7
Cameron evac order lifted
Orange reshade

Jan. 10
Walker performs at home

Jan. 12
Baseball field repairs

Jan. 13
Reconstruction's benefit

Jan. 24
Getting some help

Feb. 2
Tillman's Bar-B-Q

Feb. 9
Bon Wier's new fire truck

March 14
Gingerbread Square

March 30
Holly Beach recovery
Creole recovery

April 6
West Side story

April 12
West Side story

April 22
Concrete canoe races

May 6
Evacu-lanes

May 20
Johnson Bayou graduation 2006

June 24
Cameron Parish still faces insurance challenges

July 7
Texas Roadhouse completed

Aug. 18
Extreme fire engine

Sept. 24
Hurricane Rita:   Texas
Hurricane Rita:   Louisiana


Oct. 21
Cameron recovery celebration

Dec. 6
Sabine Pass Santa

Dec. 20
Cameron hospital reconstruction


Enough for now,

Monday, October 03, 2005

Hurricane Rita's aftermath - one day's work

I normally post an image or a photo story per day. I'm sure most of y'all have figured out these images are typically shot during my work week and other assignments make up the rest of the week. In other words, I don't shoot a picture per day even though they are posted as such.
Since Hurricane Rita hit, I've been running and gunning everywhere and couldn't post. Communication problems the first few days made us create a drop-and-run system for PJs. Then we could cover the entire region while Dave Ryan and Fayrouz handled the images - big kudos to them for all their help. For several of those days, I still haven't had time to see what I shot - edited or otherwise.
Today, instead of simply posting a single image or photo story, I thought I'd let y'all see how my day has looked lately. These shots are only from Oct. 3, 2005. There are still some shots missing from other places. I'll add them when I have "down time" at some later date. Either way, you'll get the scope of a hurricane-zone day by the end of this post.

Tree story
Beaumont is the edge of East Texas timber country. After Hurricane Rita hit last Saturday, the entire city was covered in broken trees, telephone poles and electrical wires.
City crews have cleared traffic routes through the main roads. However, fallen trees remain impaled into homes, tangled in electrical wires and everywhere else imaginable.
Before electricity can be restored. Tree cutting crews must clear the line to allow electric companies access to fix the delivery lines. They work from before sunrise to after sunset and crash hard in tents wherever they can. One of Davey's crews from Florida is familiar with clearing lines after hurricanes. They are currently living in tents on any soft patches of grass around Parkdale Mall.
Power would not be returning as quickly as it has if it were not for the excellent work of crews such as this one. I'm sure they would appreciate a case of cold beer in the evening if someone wants to thank them for their hard work.

Workers rise before the sun and prepare for a long day of work for Davey, a tree maintenance company, at Parkdale Mall in Beaumont, Texas. The Florida unit staying in tents at the mall has plenty of post-hurricane experience as they clear access for Georgia Electric to work.

All photos by Mark M. Hancock / © The Beaumont Enterprise on Monday, Oct. 3, 2005.


The sun rises before for a long day of work for Davey, a tree maintenance company, at Parkdale Mall in Beaumont.

(above) Travis Cook of Plant City, Fla. (left) and Andy Munroe of Tampa (right) talk with co-workers before for a long day of work with Davey.
(below) Dewey Shores of Plant City, Fla. has a laugh with co-workers before for a long day of work with Davey.

Felix Villavisencio of Tampa, Fla. prepares for a long day of work with Davey. Many crew members sleep in their trucks or on cots beside the trucks.

Committed to the community
LaBelle and Fannett are two small agricultural communities near Beaumont. As such, they have a combined volunteer fire department to cover a large area of land and the houses and businesses of the folks who call the towns home. In addition to their normal duties, they had to check damaged homes for hurricane survivors, clear roads and provide food, water and other essential needs for area residents.
With some help from the Salvation Army, they're doing the best they can with what they have.

Volunteers prepare a feeding station for breakfast at the LaBelle-Fannett Volunteer Fire Department in Fannett. With help stretched thin across the Gulf Coast and attention focused on New Orleans, Southeast Texans must take care of themselves and their neighbors following Hurricane Rita.

(right) Fannett resident Ronnie Badgett helps the volunteer fire department remove trash from a feeding site in Fannett.

(left) Fannett resident Ricky Breaux looks up from crushing boxes as he helps the volunteer fire department at a fire department and Salvation Army feeding site in Fannett.


Husband and wife Michael (left) and Carrie Dixon (right), both Salvation Army staffers from Kansas City, prepare to distribute cereal at a feeding station in Fannett.

Port Acres

(Above) Pike Electric Inc works to restore power in Port Acres, Texas. Hurricane Rita tore through Southeast Texas on Saturday, September 24, 2005.
(Below) An abandoned grocery store near Port Acres, Texas remains destroyed.

Pleasure Island - two fates
A storm surge and winds exceeding 120 MPH ripped across Pleasure Island, a man-made barrier island off the coast of Texas. The north end of the island is known for its golf course, yacht club and extravagant canal houses. The southern end was recently opened for sale to the public. The homes along the southern end of the island are piered and elevated to withstand heavy storms.
Hurricane Rita was more than a heavy storm. It demolished houses, and threw ships like toys. While the southern end of the island was devastated, now infested with mosquitoes and largely uninhabitable the northern end had little damage in comparison.

(Above) A largely destroyed beach house on the south end of Pleasure Island in Port Arthur, Texas displays a warning to looters.
(Below) The Port of Port Arthur remains damaged in Port Arthur, Texas. The port and nearby bridge are roughly considered the dividing line between the northern and southern end of Pleasure Island.

(Above) Moderate damage remains at the Port Arthur Yacht Club on the northern end of Pleasure Island in Port Arthur.
(Left) Most of the homes in the exclusive Mariner's Cove on the northern end of Pleasure Island in Port Arthur appear to have escaped serious hurricane and storm surge damage.


Port Arthur - a ghost town
Port Arthur's infrastructure was not regularly upgraded. When Hurricane Rita attacked, the infrastructure crumbled. The city has no sewage, no potable water, few open stores, no electricity and little hope for those who stayed behind. Work continues, but the city remains closed to all but critically skilled workers. Without a support system, most hurricane survivors have left the city. Only dedicated workers remain in the heat, humidity and clouds of mosquitoes.

(Above) Texas Department of Transportation sign technicians Robert Webb (left) and Victor Johnson (right) repair a stop sign off Highway 69 in Port Arthur near an overturned delivery truck.
(Below) A home on 9th Street in Port Arthur, Texas displays a message for friends and family. Many residents who survived Hurricane Rita have left the city after securing their property. Once gone, they can expect to pay food, housing and other expenses without their normal income. When residents return soon, they'll be in dire need of help.

What happens to the trees?
Beaumont is basically a forested city. Trees thrive and abound throughout the city. The water table is high enough to allow trees to grow with shallow roots. This also makes the trees fall in strong winds.
Consequently, as city workers and residents began to cut their way through the fallen timber, they created more debris. All the organic material needed to be removed before it became a fire hazard in addition to the hazards it currently presents.
City workers, tree cutting crews and private tree companies bring the debris to the Beaumont Municipal Airport. While a burning ban exists, the tree remains are stacked, packed and crushed into piles.

(Above) Crews stack and pack tree debris on a pile at the Beaumont Municipal Airport in Beaumont.
(Below) A mechanical claw appears to reach for the sun as it actually reaches for another load of organic debris at the Beaumont Municipal Airport in Beaumont.

Award winner: 3rd Place, Feature Photo, Press Club of Southeast Texas, Excellence in Media Awards

This post should let some regular readers understand why I haven't been posting as often as normal since the hurricane. I hope all gets back to better-than-normal soon.
It's difficult to cover the aftermath of a hurricane. It's exponentially more difficult to cover it from the inside. I believe the work our staff has done has been world-class and kept our readers informed throughout this crisis.
Nobody on the photo staff had backed down in the last two weeks (before or after Rita hit). I couldn't be more proud of fellow PJs Scott Eslinger and Jennifer Reynolds. Although there are only three of us covering the nine affected counties in Texas and the affected parishes in Louisiana, we are giving our all.

Enough for now,