More of Erin’s flood vicims found in Texas
Video: Weather |
Ida’s remnants batter East Coast Nov. 14: Blamed for at least 6 deaths in 3 states, the powerful storm is losing steam after pounding the mid-Atlantic and Northeast for days. The Weather Channel’s Julie Martin reports. |
Slideshow |
Most popular |
| |||||
In Texas, overnight rain prompted the evacuation early Friday of three areas along the Medina River and Medina Lake in Bandera County, county dispatcher Barbara Kincaid said. About 50 people were evacuated from the Lake Hills subdivision on Medina Lake, she said. Most of the river evacuations were RVs parked along the water. There were no reports of injuries.
The storms in Houston killed three people: two died when a roof over a grocery store’s storage unit collapsed. One of those was identified Friday as store employee Daniel Whitt, 29. The other man, a Coca-Cola delivery worker, was not identified.
The third Houston victim was a trucker who drowned when his 18-wheeler went into a deep retention pond.
In San Antonio, a 19-year-old man, identified as David Alexander Diaz, was swept away by floodwaters after he got out of his car. His body was found about three miles downstream.
More flood victims recovered
Searchers in Kendall County found the body of one of two people missing after their pickup truck was washed over a bridge and into a creek just as rescuers tried to pull them out, sheriff’s Chief Deputy Matt King said. The victim was identified as Juan Ramon Zaragoza, 48. His son, Juan Pablo Zaragoza, 28, was still missing, King said.
Authorities in San Antonio on Friday found the body of a woman who was caught in high water Thursday night and carried two to three miles downstream.
Summer storms have poured record rainfall across Texas and parts of Oklahoma and Kansas, with floods killing 22 people since mid-June. One July storm dropped 17 inches of rain in 24 hours and brought Texas out of a more than decade-long drought.
In Mississippi, Gov. Haley Barbour and Federal Emergency Management Agency officials warned 13,000 families living in FEMA trailers since Katrina that they must evacuate if Dean hits the Gulf Coast.
“Today people in Mississippi don’t need to panic, but they need to think,” Barbour said Friday.
Barbour said people should think about where they will go if an evacuation is ordered and how they’ll travel. He said people should make sure they have fuel, water, and a source of communication if electricity is lost.
“No government is big enough to do everything for everybody,” Barbour said.
Harris County Judge Ed Emmett, the executive of the county that includes Houston, called Erin’s rain and flooding “a wet run” for the impending Hurricane Dean.
Hurricane specialists expect this year’s Atlantic hurricane season — June 1 to Nov. 30 — to be busier than average, with as many as 16 tropical storms, nine of them strengthening into hurricanes. Ten tropical storms developed in the Atlantic last year, but only two made landfall in the United States.
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM WEATHER |
| Add Weather headlines to your news reader: |
Sponsored links
Resource guide


