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This Article is From Aug 25, 2018

A Year After Devastating Storm, Houston Area Votes on Record Bond

(Bloomberg) -- A year to the day after Hurricane Harvey ravaged the Gulf Coast of Texas, residents there head to the polls to decide a $2.5 billion bond referendum for critical flood control projects in an area that the Category 4 storm plunged underwater.

Harris County officials purposely chose Saturday's anniversary for the election, seeking to bring out voters and quickly cash in on matching federal funds. Proceeds from the bond, if approved, would finance about 237 projects, including repairs to flood-damaged drainage infrastructure, buyouts of flood-prone properties and channel modifications to improve the flow of storm water. It's the largest bond measure in the county's history.

The vote comes as coastal cities around the country are facing the threat of catastrophic infrastructure damage from storms exasperated by climate change. Last year, the U.S. was hit by three major storms that virtually destroyed Puerto Rico's electric grid, flooded Texas with record rains and ripped into Florida, sending the sea into the streets of Miami. The number of deaths is still uncertain and the storms racked up losses totaling more than $200 billion, the most ever.

For Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner, the vote is one of the most important decisions residents there will make. "We can't afford to wait any longer. We cannot afford to get this one wrong," he said during a press conference earlier this month.

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