Torrential rainstorms
battered Louisiana on Sunday, leaving thousands without power, after pounding
southeastern Texas as the remnants of Hurricane Patricia converged with a second
storm.
The heaviest band of
rain moved over the Gulf of Mexico, triggering coastal flood warnings and flash
flood watches in southwest Louisiana and soaking New Orleans, according to the
National Weather Service (NWS).
About 22,000 people
were left without power in the greater New Orleans area. Some streets were
flooded, while a high tide surge brought some coastal flooding as well.
Rainfall has totaled as
much as 7 inches (18 cm) since late Saturday night, and forecasters predicted
another 5 inches (13 cm) could fall. The NWS said waterspouts over lakes and
tornados over land were both possible into the early morning hours.
"Most of the
heavier rain to the west of New Orleans will taper off in the evening ... and
for far eastern Louisiana it will probably end closer to midnight," said
NWS forecaster Gavin Phillips.
The NWS issued a
tornado watch for southeastern Louisiana and coastal Mississippi into early
Monday, and warned that severe thunderstorms could develop in the region.
A tornado touched down
near the community of Larose, about 45 minutes south of New Orleans, though no
serious damage was reported.
Tides along the
southern coast of Louisiana were expected to be a few feet above normal at high
tide due to sustained winds, likely flooding roads in lower-lying areas,
Phillips said.
More than 9 inches (23
cm) of rain swelled rivers and flooded roads around Houston, but no injuries or
deaths were reported as flash flood warnings ended.
Petroleum refineries
along the U.S. Gulf Coast, which make up more than 40 percent of U.S. capacity,
also appeared to be largely undamaged.
In the Eagle Ford and
Permian Basin oil fields of south and west Texas, no major production cuts were
reported. While the rains were heavy in Houston, they came after a month-long
dry spell so flooding was relatively limited.
TEXAS WITHSTANDS PUMMELING
The storms over the
past two days drenched a large swath from south of Dallas to the southeast
coast, triggering flash flooding in Navarro County, about 50 miles (80 km)
south of Dallas, on Saturday.
A Union Pacific freight
train carrying cement derailed in Navarro County after a creek overflowed,
washing out the tracks. Locomotives and rail cars were pushed on their sides,
and a two-person crew was forced to swim to safety.
Repair teams cleared
the derailed cars by Sunday morning, but they were not expected to be righted
for several hours and the rail line was not due to reopen until Monday at the
earliest, Union Pacific spokesman Jeff DeGraff said.
Navarro County was one
of the hardest-hit areas. The tiny town of Powell got 20 inches (50 cm) of rain
over 30 hours, said meteorologist Brett Rathbun of Accuweather.
Navarro County Sheriff
Elmer Tanner reported dozens of rescues from vehicles, homes and businesses
since Friday.
In San Antonio, a woman
reported her boyfriend was swept into a drainage ditch as he walked his dog
early Saturday.
The force of the water
washed him out of the underground ditch and he passed out, the San Antonio Fire
Department said on Twitter. He later came to and called authorities.
The rain was
strengthened by the remnants of Patricia, which was downgraded to a tropical
depression after crashing into Mexico's west coast on Friday as a powerful
hurricane.
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