Tuesday, June 16, 2015

70 Million in the Path of Massive Tropical Storm Bill

70 Million in the Path of Massive Tropical Storm Bill as It Hits the Coast and ...

ABC News - ‎7 minutes ago‎
Streets and highways under water, tornado watches, flash flood warnings, rescues, heavy winds, and massive flooding forecasted to last for days.
Tropical Storm Bill dumps rain on Texas, raises fear of floods
The Latest: Tropical Storm Bill weakens in Texas
Tropical Storm Bill forces state to move to 'escalated response' mode
Live Updates: Tropical Storm Bill Prompts Tornado Watch in Texas; Heavy Rain ...
Dog-Day-Free: Cooler, Wetter Bias Into Late June (Bill Weakens but Flood Risk ...
A vehicle is stranded in flood waters on Quitman Street as Tropical Storm Bill moves into the area in Houston, Texas, June 16, 2015. (Photo by Aaron M. Sprecher/EPA)
A vehicle is stranded in flood waters on Quitman Street as Tropical Storm Bill moves into the area in Houston, Texas, June 16, 2015.
Photo by Aaron M. Sprecher/EPA

Tropical Storm Bill dumps rain on Texas, raises fear of floods

By Phil Helsel
There was flooding in Texas Tuesday as Tropical Storm Bill made landfall on the southeastern part of the state, and dumping more than two inches of rain on a region that was hard hit by flooding last month, officials said.
Tropical Storm Bill is the first tropical storm to hit Texas in seven years. Nearly 2 1/2 inches of rain fell in Baytown, and there were reports in Houston to the west, according to the National Weather Service.
The tropical storm made landfall at Port O’Connor at around noon and was located 10 miles northeast of Victoria as of 7 p.m. local time, according to the National Hurricane Center. A tropical storm warning remained in place from Port Aransas to south of Galveston Tuesday.
The storm had maximum sustained winds of 45 mph as it moved northwest towards Austin at 9 mph, and is expected to drop up to 8 inches of rain in eastern Texas as it moves towards Oklahoma, the Hurricane Center said.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency has mobilized personnel in the region to respond to the storm in Texas and Oklahoma, White House spokesman Josh Earnest said.
The Houston area and a county southwest of Austin were hard hit by heavy rain and flooding in late May that was blamed in more than 20 deaths across the state. Water peaked 3 ½ feet over normal levels in Port Lavaca, Texas and there was street flooding reported in Galveston and Houston as the storm came ashore.
Tornado watches were in place for a large swath of southeastern Texas that included more than 60 counties, including Hays County, where at least nine people were killed after the Blanco River flooded during downpours over the Memorial Day weekend.
Flood watches were in place from southeastern Texas through eastern Oklahoma and to southern Illinois, the NWS said.
This article originally appeared on NBCNews.com.

No comments: