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Power expected to be restored to most affected by deadly Houston storm

Father Elias Lopez reads by candle light during Sunday morning 8:30 mass, Sunday, May 19, 2024, at All Saints Catholic Church where parishioners endured no lights and no air conditioning due to a lack of electric power following severe storms that passed through the area Thursday evening. (Kirk Sides/Houston Chronicle via AP)
Father Elias Lopez reads by candle light during Sunday morning 8:30 mass, Sunday, May 19, 2024, at All Saints Catholic Church where parishioners endured no lights and no air conditioning due to a lack of electric power following severe storms that passed through the area Thursday evening. (Kirk Sides/Houston Chronicle via AP)

HOUSTON (AP) -- Houston area residents affected by deadly storms last week that left at least seven dead were finally getting some good news as officials said they expected power to be restored by Sunday evening to a majority of the hundreds of thousands still in the dark and without air conditioning amid hot and humid weather.

The widespread destruction of Thursday's storms brought much of Houston to a standstill. Thunderstorms and hurricane-force winds tore through the city -- reducing businesses and other structures to piles of debris, uprooting trees and shattering glass from downtown skyscrapers. A tornado also touched down near the northwest Houston suburb of Cypress.

More than 352,000 homes and businesses in Texas remained without electricity Sunday morning, with most of those in the Houston area.

"It's been a madhouse out here," Cypress resident Hallie O'Bannon said. "You know we don't have any power. No hot water. It's been really crazy."

At one of five cooling centers for people still without power in their homes in Houston, residents took shelter from the heat at a community center in the Cloverleaf neighborhood.

Carolina Sierra and her 6-year-old son, Derek, enjoyed the air conditioning for a couple of hours Sunday. She said they have been without electricity since the storm hit Thursday, and their home has been stifling.

Derek passed the time coloring a picture of a dragon while his mother charged her cellphone and a portable lamp they planned to use Sunday night if the power was still not restored. Sierra, 38, said she gives her son multiple baths to try to keep him cool but he tosses and turns at night and struggles to sleep.

"We are desperate. We hardly sleep at night because of the heat," Sierra said.

Harris County Commissioner Adrian Garcia stood outside the center Sunday, helping load water and ice onto the vehicles while offering words of encouragement to residents still waiting for power to be restored.

"We are seeing a bit of the recovery come through. But we can't see enough of it fast enough," Garcia said.

Help was also on the way in the form of disaster assistance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency and loans from the Small Business Administration, said Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo, the top elected official in the county where Houston is located. The federal assistance, which can help pay for temporary housing and repairs, will help residents affected by last week's storms as well as by flooding from heavy rainfall in late April and early May in parts of Houston, Harris County and several counties north of Houston.

CenterPoint Energy said it anticipated that about 80% of affected customers in the Houston area would have service restored by Sunday evening. Hidalgo said 90% of customers could be restored by Wednesday.

Officials had worried that high-voltage transmission towers that were torn apart by the high winds would substantially prolong efforts to restore power.

"They were able to go around and reroute around those downed towers because of the new technologies. It's great news," Hidalgo said.

But Hidalgo warned residents that if the equipment in their home is damaged, they will not get power until residents take care of those repairs.

More than 4,600 customers remained without power Sunday morning in Louisiana, which had also been hit by strong winds and a suspected tornado.

CenterPoint Energy said 2,000 employees and more than 5,000 contractors were working in the Houston area to restore power.

"We understand the higher temperatures we are experiencing across Houston and surrounding communities make getting the lights and air conditioning back on even more important," Lynnae Wilson, CenterPoint's senior vice president of electric business, said in a statement.

Residents broke into cheers as lights and air conditioning kicked on at the eight-story senior housing Houston Heights Tower on Sunday morning. The nearly 200 residents had been living on emergency power since Thursday evening, with generators providing enough electricity to run just one of the building's elevators and a handful of fans in the community room, leaving apartments in darkness.

Volunteers and city workers had been ensuring residents received a steady supply of water, food and essentials like toilet paper.

"It just goes to show you how people come together," 72-year-old resident Joseph Torregrossa said, choking back tears.

The National Weather Service said in a post on the social media site X that residents should expect "sunny, hot and increasingly humid days" in the Houston area. Highs of about 90 degrees (32 Celsius) were expected this week, with heat indexes likely approaching 102 degrees (39 Celsius) by midweek.

Houston area school districts canceled classes for more than 400,000 students Friday. The Houston Independent School District, the state's largest, said power had been restored to nearly 200 campuses and those schools would be open Monday. But another 77 campuses remained without power.

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Associated Press reporter Mark Vancleave contributed to this report.

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photo Parishioners endured no lights and no air conditioning to worship during Sunday morning 8:30 mass, May 19, 2024, at All Saints Catholic Church, in Houston, due to a lack of electric power following severe storms that passed through the area Thursday evening. (Kirk Sides/Houston Chronicle via AP)
photo 72-year-old Joseph Torregrossa lives on the seventh floor of the Houston Heights Tower senior living facility, which has had only emergency generator power since Thursday night's storms, Sunday, May 19, 2024 in Houston, Texas. Electric crews restored full power and air conditioning Sunday morning. (AP Photo/Mark Vancleave)
photo David Figueroa, left, and Delmy Suazo toss bricks to a pile as they work to clean up debris after a wall came down at an apartment complex in the aftermath of a severe storm on Friday, May 17, 2024 in Houston. Fast-moving thunderstorms pummeled southeastern Texas for the second time this month, killing at least four people, blowing out windows in high-rise buildings, downing trees and knocking out power to more than 900,000 homes and businesses in the Houston area. (Brett Coomer/Houston Chronicle via AP)
photo Neighborhood children check out an uprooted tree that's blocking East 15th Street near Arlington Street Friday, May 17, 2024 at The Heights in Houston. Power outages could last weeks in parts of Houston, an official warned Friday, after thunderstorms with hurricane-force winds tore through the city, knocking out electricity to nearly 1 million homes and businesses in the region, blowing out windows on downtown high rises and flipping vehicles. (Yi-Chin Lee/Houston Chronicle via AP)
photo Tree service crews climb atop an SUV to cut apart a tree that fell on it at an apartment complex in the 4600 block of Sherwood in the aftermath of a severe storm on Friday, May 17, 2024, in Houston. Fast-moving thunderstorms pummeled southeastern Texas for the second time this month, killing at least four people, blowing out windows in high-rise buildings, downing trees and knocking out power to more than 900,000 homes and businesses in the Houston area. (Brett Coomer/Houston Chronicle via AP)
photo Power transmission lines were twisted and toppled after powerful storms swept through the Houston area on Saturday, May 18, 2024 in Cypress, Texas. As the Houston area works to clean up and restore power to hundreds of thousands, it will do so amid a smog warning and rising Texas heat. (AP photo/Mark Vancleave)

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