Heavy rain across SE Texas
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Heavy rain threatens flash flooding for millions
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Isolated flash flooding is possible in southeast Texas until Saturday, July 19, according to Zapata County Emergency Management . Then the focus shifts to West Texas through early next week.
Search and recovery efforts continue in Kerr County, 12 days after the tragic flood that claimed more than 130 lives along the Guadalupe.
Texas leaders’ dreams of unlimited development and a rush of artificial intelligence data centers are on a collision course with a new reality of extreme weather, as this
A few thunderstorms are possible on Monday, but much drier conditions are expected soon as the weather pattern shifts.
A washed-out Guadalupe River appeared stuck in time nearly two weeks after the catastrophe. Large trees laid on their sides, and debris lingered throughout what was left.
Flood warnings were in effect in several areas, including ones that were devastated by the July 4 floods. By the afternoon, the rain had eased up in some parts, and some rescuers resumed their work.
In areas that see rainfall and increased cloud cover, temperatures are expected to remain below seasonal averages into next week, providing some relief from the summer heat. However, much of central and southern Texas, areas in the recovery phase from the catastrophic flooding, will face dangerous heat instead of renewed flooding.
Florida's Attorney General James Uthmeier jumped in to amplify the misinformation - citing a newly passed Florida law banning loosely defined "weather modification" practices that climatologists say have nothing to do with increasingly severe weather events.
Rain chances fall to less than 10% across the San Antonio metro area on Wednesday, and long-range forecast models say this could be the new normal.
Much of the state is forecast to see consistently warmer weather, with highs in the upper 90s to low 100s in coming weeks.