At least 3 dead as flooding hits Texas, Oklahoma

Agence France-Presse

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

At least 3 dead as flooding hits Texas, Oklahoma
2ND UPDATE: Cars and trucks are submerged and people take to inflatable lounge chairs to float down the street in surreal scenes

WASHINGTON, DC, USA (2ND UPDATE) – Rescuers searched Monday, May 25, for at least 12 people missing in spectacular flash flooding in Texas and Oklahoma that also left at least three dead.

 

More heavy rain with potential for additional flooding was forecast.

 

The raging waters destroyed hundreds of homes and sent cars floating down streets, rolling and bobbing like giant toys.

 

In the Texas city of San Marcos, residents were ordered to evacuate their homes as flood waters rose menacingly around them, following torrential rain that turned streets into meandering rivers.

 

Cars and trucks were submerged and people used inflatable lounge chairs to float down the street, in surreal scenes.

 

As many as 400 homes in the surrounding area were destroyed, authorities said, and San Marcos opened temporary shelters to host residents who could not return home. 

 

In Texas at least 12 people are reported missing, said Kharley Smith, emergency response coordinator for Hays County, which includes San Marcos.

 

She said people were forming their own search parties along the Blanco River, and warned them against this, saying it was dangerous.

 

“We have local resources, regional and state assets that are actively doing search and rescues. It’s not safe for the general public to go down and do those rescue or search operations themselves,” Smith told a news conference.

 

The city council said the river had broken record levels set in the 1920s.

 

Fire Marshal Ken Bell told CNN that at least one person was confirmed dead and crews were searching for three missing people.

 

At least two people also died in Oklahoma, which is located to the north of Texas. 

 

A firefighter in the town of Claremore died when he was swept into a storm drain while trying to help a resident in floodwaters, CNN said, and a woman in Tulsa died after her car hydroplaned.

 

The National Weather Service warned that strong to severe thunderstorms were expected across a large stretch of the central and southern plains toward the Mississippi River Valley. – Rappler.com

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!