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93-year-old woman dies at independent living facility during Houston’s sweltering heat

Barbara Sturgis’ son is calling for changes in the facility’s protocols

Barbara Sturgis (KPRC 2)

KINGWOOD, Texas – A local man is calling for changes to protocols at an independent living facility in Kingwood. It’s where he says his mother died early this morning during extremely hot conditions.

The power at The Terraces was knocked out during Hurricane Beryl and hasn’t been restored.

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Jonathan Sturgis loved and adored his 93-year-old mother, Barbara Sturgis.

“Wonderful lady. Best mom you could have, a lot of people say that. She’s been through a lot,” he said.

Most recently, Jonathan says his mom was subjected to sweltering heat living at The Terraces.

She died Thursday morning as other residents were being voluntarily evacuated. Jonathan says he has concerns about how the facility’s management company, Frontier Management, handled the situation.

“No communication before the storm hit, no communication during the storm, and we got one email on Wednesday, two days after the storm hit,” he added.

He says this is a copy of the email that partly reads: “Our generator continues to run select lighting and power in both dining rooms and the kitchen. We have air conditioners and fans in place.”

“Went up there and had lunch with her [his mom] on Tuesday, and when I entered the facility, it seemed like it was pretty reasonable considering they were on a backup generator. Temperatures were a little bit elevated but under control,” Sturgis said.

But he says that wasn’t the case by Thursday.

“By Thursday morning my mom passed away, I got up there 9 a.m. in the morning, and I immediately noticed right away the building was significantly hotter,” he said.

When KPRC 2′s Deven Clarke asked if he felt residents should’ve been evacuated sooner, Jonathan’s response: “Yes. Absolutely no doubt. No doubt at all.”

92-year-old Bob Burgess also lives at The Terraces.

“It was hot no question, that’s why they had to evacuate because it was having an effect on elderly people,” Burgess said.

Burgess says his main frustration lies with CenterPoint which says it prioritizes power restoration for “facilities vital to safety health and welfare,” but so far, Burgess says CenterPoint hasn’t shown up there.

“The situation seems to have been poorly handled by somebody. It took a long time for not much to happen,” Burgess said.

We reached out to Frontier Management with questions about possibly making changes to their communication and evacuation protocols. The company offered this response:

We are heartbroken by the passing of a resident that occurred at The Terraces at Kingwood during the unprecedented power outages and heat in the Houston area following Hurricane Beryl. We have been in contact with the family and we are doing everything we can to support them, our residents and our team during this difficult time. Local authorities and appropriate parties have been notified. Frontier is committed to ensuring the health, safety, and comfort of our residents.

We also reached out to CenterPoint and while we haven’t heard back, according to CenterPoint’s restoration tracker, the facility is in blue which means an assessment has been completed. Still no word on exactly when power will be restored.


About the Author
Deven Clarke headshot

Southern Yankee. Native Brooklynite turned proud Texan

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