Hundreds
evacuated in Texas after storms leave at least 15 dead
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[May 28, 2015]
By Jon Herskovitz
AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - Hundreds of
people were ordered to evacuate flood-threatened areas of Texas on
Wednesday as torrential rains battered the state, where at least 15
people have been killed in weather-related incidents this week,
including six in Houston.
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People were told to stay away from more than 200 homes in Parker
County where the Brazos River was poised to overflow its banks about
30 miles (50 km) west of Fort Worth on Wednesday night, county
officials said.
"The river is coming up fast and flowing at dangerous volumes,"
Parker County Judge Mark Riley told a news conference, adding
shelters were available.
The death toll in Texas was expected to rise, with about a dozen
people still missing and more thunderstorms pelting the already
flooded cities of Houston and Austin.
In Hays County alone, nine people were missing after flood waters on
Monday swept away homes from their foundations. Three people in the
county, about 30 miles (50 km) southwest of Austin, were already
confirmed dead.
At least three people were injured on Wednesday when a tornado hit a
natural gas drilling rig near the Texas panhandle city of Canadian,
the Hemphill County sheriff said. The return of heavy rains was impeding emergency rescue efforts
across the state.
"The river is going to start to rise again," said Kharley Smith, the
Hays County Emergency Management coordinator. "It is going to shift
the previously inspected debris piles."
Floods damaged about 4,000 structures and snarled transport in
Houston, the fourth most-populous U.S. city, where more than a
thousand vehicles were trapped in rising water.
The body of the latest victim in Houston, a 31-year-old man, was
discovered near a submerged vehicle, the Harris County Institute of
Forensic Sciences said.
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The storms dealt a blow to air travel, with nearly 240 flights
canceled as of 5:30 p.m. at airports in Dallas and Houston, among
the nation's busiest.
The National Weather Service issued flash flood watches for parts of
North Texas and large sections of Oklahoma.
Near Dallas, police evacuated people living near a dam that had
threatened to burst and told people to move livestock to higher
ground.
About 11 inches (28 cm) of rain fell in Houston on Monday, while
parts of Austin were hit by as much as 7 inches (18 cm).
There was no damage estimate available for Texas, which has a $1.4
trillion-a-year economy and is the country's main domestic source of
energy.
(Writing by Jon Herskovitz in Austin, Texas; Additional reporting by
Lisa Maria Garza in Dallas, Jim Forsyth in San Antonio, Heide
Brandes in Oklahoma City and Amanda Orr in Houston; Editing by Lisa
Lambert, Sandra Maler and Ken Wills)
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