Dallas woman dies in car as flash floods lash region
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[August 23, 2022]
By Brendan O'Brien
(Reuters) -Flooding and heavy rains hit the
Dallas, Texas area on Monday, leaving at least one person dead after
their vehicle was swept away by rising water, authorities said.
The body of a 60-year-old woman, who has not been identified, was
recovered from her car after floodwaters receded Monday afternoon in an
area of east Dallas, according to Clay Jenkins, the top elected official
in Dallas County.
Rainfall over a 24-hour period ending Monday night exceeded forecasts,
with one area in east Dallas experiencing more than 15 inches (38cm) of
rain, according to Dallas water utility's floodway operations.
The National Weather Service (NWS) said flood warnings in some parts of
Dallas were in effect until at least Wednesday morning, with risks of
thunderstorms and brief periods of heavy rainfall possible for Tuesday
and Wednesday.
The heavy rains in the Dallas area and across the Southern Plains were
the latest example of extreme weather to hit the United States as a
result of climate change, which has recently caused dangerous flooding,
tornadoes, wildfires and heat waves.
Video footage from local media showed motorists getting out of their
submerged vehicles and swimming for safety in the dark overnight Monday.
After daybreak, a video from a local ABC affiliate showed firefighters
slowly walking a resident away from a flooded home in a strong downpour.
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Drivers braved flooded streets in Fort
Worth, Texas during a heavy downpour late Sunday (August 21).
"There is literally no meeting or place to be that is worth risking
your life or anyone else on the road. Please STAY HOME if at all
possible," Dallas Councilmen Adam Bazaldua wrote on Twitter.
Numerous roads remained closed on Monday afternoon due to flooding,
the Dallas Police Department said on Twitter, warning motorists to
avoid driving in high waters.
The NWS also issued flood advisories for parts of Southern Oklahoma,
Northern Louisiana and Central Mississippi until Tuesday night.
"A multi-day heavy rainfall event is in progress over parts of the
southern Plains that may produce instances of flash flooding in
urban areas and places with poor drainage," the weather service
said.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Chicago and Brad Brooks in Lubbock,
Texas; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama, Bernadette Baum and Lincoln Feast)
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