Lakewood
Church in Houston has started accepting victims of Hurricane Harvey who need a place to
shelter, the megachurch said this morning, after it received backlash for not
initially welcoming in evacuees.
Joel Osteen, the church's famed pastor,
tweeted Tuesday, "Lakewood’s doors are open and we are receiving anyone
who needs shelter."
A
Lakewood Church spokesperson told ABC News Tuesday its doors have always been
open and the church is waiting for city officials to designate it as a shelter
so it can obtain cots and other assistance. (The spokesperson said the church
doesn't have showers or a kitchen.)
At first it was difficult for church staff to get to the
facility from their homes, the spokesperson explained.
Moreover, the facility did not initially shelter people
because it would be too dangerous to have people on a lower level, which could
flood, the spokesperson added. Now that the floodwaters have receded, the
church decided to bring in evacuees, the spokesperson said.
"The mayor was asking people not to get on the
roadways, plus this building was very close to flooding. It was within a foot
of coming over our flood gates," Osteen told ABC
affiliate KVUE on Tuesday
night. "But also, our staff and building engineers and people, nobody was
here. You know, it's not like we can ask them to come out. But you know the
fact is we're here to help people. The notion that we would turn people away is
totally not who Lakewood has been for the last 60 years and it's not who it is
now and that's why we're seeing this."
Lakewood Church sent these photos to ABC News Monday
evening that it said showed flooding in and around its complex.
Now, in
the wake of Harvey, which tore through the Houston area last weekend, forcing
evacuations, wiping out homes and killing at least 11, several school buses
filled with evacuees arrived today at Lakewood Church, some toting their
belongings in plastic garbage bags.
Among the fatalities announced on Tuesday by the Beaumont
Police Department was a woman who died after the car she was driving in with
her young daughter ended up in high water. She and her daughter exited the
vehicle, only to be swept up into the canal. First responders rescued the pair,
but the mother was unresponsive and died. The child is in stable condition.
Among
those who lost homes to flooding are two Lakewood Church pastors.
The church also said it's accepting supplies including
baby food and formula.
On
Sunday, Lakewood Church posted on Facebook that it was "inaccessible due
to severe flooding" and directed displaced residents to shelters in the
city. The church can hold more than 16,000 people and has been previously
active in relief efforts, including sheltering displaced victims during Hurricane
Katrina in 2005.
The Facebook post courted criticism on social media,
where photos appeared to suggest that the massive building, once home to the NBA's Houston
Rockets, had not been damaged by the torrential rains.
Osteen insisted in a statement Monday evening that he and
his church were "prepared to house people once shelters reach
capacity."
"We have never closed our doors. We will continue to
be a distribution center for those in need," the statement said.
It added, "Lakewood will be a value to the community
in the aftermath of this storm in helping our fellow citizens rebuild their
lives."
(Credits: ABC News' Kaitlyn Folmer, Victor Oquendo, Alyssa Pone and Anastasia Williams contributed to this report.)
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