HOUSTON 鈥 As Tina Kitzmiller sat inside her sweltering apartment, windows and doors open in the hope of catching even the slightest breeze, she was frustrated and worried for her dog and her neighbors.
It had been days since Hurricane Beryl blew ashore from the Gulf of Mexico on July 8, causing widespread destruction and knocking out power to more than 2 million people, including the Houston senior independent living facility where Kitzmiller lives. Outdoor temperatures had reached at least 90 degrees most days, and the heat inside the building was stifling.
Kitzmiller moved there not long ago with Kai, her 12-year-old dog, shortly after riding out 90-plus-mph winds from a under a comforter on the floor of the 33-foot RV she called home. She didn鈥檛 need medical care, as a nursing home would offer, and thought she and Kai could be safer at an independent senior facility than in the RV. She assumed her new home would have an emergency power system in place at least equivalent to that of the post offices she鈥檇 worked in for 35 years.
鈥淚 checked out the food. I checked out the activities,鈥 said Kitzmiller, 61, now retired. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know I needed to inquire about a generator.鈥
Even after multiple incidents of extreme weather 鈥 including a 2021 Texas winter storm that caused widespread blackouts and prompted a 鈥 not much has changed for those living in long-term care facilities when natural disasters strike in Texas or elsewhere.
鈥淭here has been some movement, but I think it鈥檚 been way too slow,鈥 said , a professor of health care policy at Harvard Medical School. 鈥淲e keep getting tested and we keep failing the test. But I do think we are going to have to face this issue.鈥
A power outage can be difficult for anyone, but older adults are especially vulnerable to temperature extremes, with medications or medical conditions affecting their bodies鈥 and . Additionally, some medications need .
Federal guidelines require nursing homes to maintain safe indoor temperatures but do not regulate how. For example, facilities face no requirement that generators or other alternative energy sources support heating and air conditioning systems. States are largely responsible for compliance, Grabowski said, and if states are failing in that regard, change doesn鈥檛 happen.
Furthermore, while nursing homes face such federal oversight, lower-care-level facilities that provide some medical care 鈥 known as assisted living 鈥 are regulated at the state level, so the rules for emergency preparedness vary widely.
Some states have toughened those guidelines. Maryland in assisted living facilities following Hurricane Isabel, which left more than 1.2 million residents in the state without power in 2003. Florida in 2018, after Hurricane Irma led to deaths at one facility.
But Texas has not. And no requirements for generators exist in Texas for the roughly 2,000 assisted living facilities or the even less regulated independent living sites, like Kitzmiller鈥檚.
Generally, apartment complexes marketed to senior citizens, known in the industry as independent living facilities, don鈥檛 have any special regulations in Texas and many other states.

Nationally, assisted living facilities and independent living facilities have been the fastest-growing sectors in senior living. Residents at such facilities often have medical needs, Grabowski said, but for a variety of reasons have chosen to live in an environment that allows more independence than a nursing home, which would provide medical care. That doesn鈥檛 mean the residents in these lower-care-level facilities are any less susceptible to extreme temperatures when the power goes out.
鈥淚f you鈥檙e overwhelmed by the heat in your apartment, that鈥檚 unsafe,鈥 he said.
Republican state Rep. tried several times since 2020 to pass legislation requiring assisted living facilities in Texas to have backup generators. But the bills failed. He is not seeking reelection this year.
鈥淚t鈥檚 horrible what the state of Texas is doing,鈥 said Thompson, blaming corporate greed and politicians more interested in stirring up their base and raising their national profile than improving the lives of Texans. 鈥淗ow we treat our elderly says something about us 鈥 and they鈥檙e not being treated right.鈥
Nim Kidd, chief of the Texas Division of Emergency Management, said at that senior facility operators are accountable if they do not keep residents safe. 鈥淭hat location is responsible for the health, safety, and welfare of the patients and residents that are there,鈥 he . 鈥淚t is that facility鈥檚 responsibility.鈥
Under , power restoration is supposed to be prioritized for nursing, assisted living, and hospice facilities.
The resistance to adding oversight or more governmental protections has not surprised , a senior manager at the Harris County Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program at UTHealth Houston鈥檚 Cizik School of Nursing. He said that while he believes the safety and health of residents are paramount, he recognizes that installing generators is expensive. He also said some people within the industry continue to believe extreme events are rare.
鈥淏ut all of us in Houston this year already learned that they鈥檙e happening more frequently,鈥 Shelley said. 鈥淭his is already the third time since May that big portions of Houston have been without power for long periods of time.鈥
After the 2021 blackouts, Texas鈥 Health and Human Services Commission conducted a that found 47% of the assisted living and 99% of the nursing care facilities that responded reported having generators.
The U.S. Senate investigation following the 2021 Texas storm recommended a national requirement that assisted living facilities have emergency power supplies to both maintain safe temperatures and keep medical equipment running.
A from Texas鈥 long-term care ombudsman, Patty Ducayet, also recommended requiring generators at assisted living centers. The report suggested that all long-term care facilities maintain safe temperatures in a location that can be accessed by every resident. The report recommended requiring assisted living facilities to annually submit emergency response plans to state regulators to be reviewed by state officials. The recommendations have not been adopted.
On July 15 鈥 more than a week after Beryl hit 鈥 Kitzmiller said she just wanted the power back on. She praised the staff at her facility but said she worried for residents who were isolated on her building鈥檚 second and third floors, which were hotter amid the outage. Some were unable to keep required medicine refrigerated, she said. And without functioning elevators, many couldn鈥檛 get to the first floor, where it was cooler.
Mostly, Kitzmiller said, she was frustrated with companies and politicians who hadn鈥檛 yet fixed the problem.
鈥淚t鈥檚 their mothers, their grandmothers, and their family in these homes, these facilities,鈥 she said. 鈥淎ll I can think is 鈥楽hame on you.鈥欌
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