Drenched Texas Gulf communities brace for rain
CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas (AP) — Texas Gulf coast communities soaked by flooding that overpowered one city’s sewage system and forced school closures prepared for another rainy day today, as crews planned to resume searching for a motorist who went missing in a flash flood.
The National Weather Service issued flash flood watches for 11 Texas counties, including Nueces County, where flooding swamped the streets of Corpus Christi on Sunday and Monday and forced more than 100,000 gallons of raw sewage out of a manhole.
Crews planned to resume looking for a missing motorist who called for help Monday after rushing water along Oso Creek near Corpus Christi picked up his small car. The call went dead before authorities could locate the caller.
Texas has been buffeted this summer by tropical storms or their remnants. The rainfall that caused this week’s flooding wasn’t directly from Hurricane Karl, which made landfall in Mexico on Friday, but the storm’s moisture helped make for a “perfect combination,” National Weather Service meteorologist Joel Veeneman said Monday.
More rain was forecast Tuesday for parts of the Texas Gulf coast, the National Weather Service said Tuesday.
“The water has no where to go but run off as soils are saturated and creeks are full,” the weather service said in an advisory.
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