Severe storms pound Texas coast
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Heavy rain continues across the metroplex as slow-moving storms push through North Texas, raising a concern for flash flooding as the severe weather threat weakens. Three to six inches of rain could fall in some areas as storms linger and produce intense downpours,
Storms pushed into the Houston area and Southeast Texas Saturday morning to kick off Memorial Day Weekend. A drop in temperatures came in as moisture increased across the region, setting the stage
The KHOU 11 Weather Team has issued a Weather Impact Alert for Saturday and Sunday as rounds of rain, heavy at times, could cause issues on roadways and flooding in some locations. While Friday is expected to bring a temporary break from the rain with some sunshine and only isolated afternoon storms possible,
Repeated rounds of storms could bring heavy rain, flash flooding and dangerous travel conditions to the Houston area through Memorial Day weekend.
The severe weather threat during the work week is now shifting toward a flooding concern heading into the Memorial Day holiday weekend.
Morning Overview on MSN
Days of heavy rain will drench the holiday route from Texas to New York — forecasters flag flash flooding across a dozen states this Memorial Day weekend
The Memorial Day getaway is shaping up to be one of the wettest in years along a heavily traveled corridor stretching from Texas to the Northeast. From Friday, May 23, through at least midweek, a stubborn pipeline of Gulf moisture will pump round after round of heavy rain from the Texas coast through the Ohio
Camp Mystic's chief health officer lost her nursing license after regulators cited emergency planning failures tied to the flood that killed 27 girls.
Because of the increasing rainfall threat, the National Weather Service has issued a flood watch for Friday evening through Memorial Day.
Texas nurse Mary Liz Eastland had her license suspended over her handling of the fatal July 4th flooding of Camp Mystic
A Texas board has suspended the nursing license of Camp Mystic’s co-director in a scathing order that accuses her of not helping children evacuate during last year’s catastrophic floods.
The Texas Board of Nursing alleges Mary Liz Eastland, the Chief Health Officer, evacuated herself and her children from the camp and never called emergency services.
First responders rescued an infant from a car that became trapped in floodwaters in southern Texas on Saturday, video shows.