Damn that's a lot of moisture! 15" of snow is a blizzard and that's not nearly the same amount of water.
Hey guys, delayed in Denver right now, but should be getting into Houston at 7. What's the best course of action for me at this point? Hotel connected to the airport? My car is parked at the Parking Spot(confirmed no flooding there)
Man these people at the apartment complexes in the Greenspoint area have been in desperate need of help all day and the city still hasn't really done enough. Bad look for Mayor Turner IMO.
Is it safe to drink tap water in an area that has been hit with floods? My folks said their garage was flooded along with the area where the water line is, but no one has mentioned whether they can use tap water for cooking, bathing or drinking.
Damn...just found out a friends wife drowned and died today in the flood. By 59 and Rice. That underpass by Bubbas Burger and Sams Club. RIP +
That's horrible. Terrible thread title for news like this. Sorry to hear R0ckets03. Peace to you, her family and loved ones.
Wow that is terrible. Sorry to hear that. Deepest condolences to their family. . Did she drive into the water?
http://abc13.com/news/flood-victims-family-speaks-to-abc13/1298148/ FAMILY OF WOMAN WHO DROWNED NEAR GALLERIA SPEAKS TO ABC13 <iframe width="476" height="267" src="http://abc13.com/video/embed/?pid=1298148" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe> By Tracy Clemons Monday, April 18, 2016 11:31PM HOUSTON (KTRK) -- The husband of a woman who drowned in Monday's floodwaters says his wife was on her way to work when she drove into high waters in southwest Houston. Her husband says the exit his wife normally takes was blocked off so she took a detour to a detour where the Westpark splits to 610 and Highway 59 split off. Rajiv Singh spoke exclusively with Eyewitness News for two reasons: to warn others to be more careful, and because he believes something needs to be done about what he calls a death trap that took his wife. "This morning she called me around 6:47. It was a brief phone call. She mentioned she was in a little trouble. She had water all around her," Singh said. Singh tells Eyewitness News he couldn't have imagined that would be his last conversation with his wife, Sunita Singh. "She saw lights in her rearview. I thought OK, I was under the impression it's bad weather, there are people rescuing her," he said. She was headed to her job as an electrical engineer with the oil and gas company Bechtel. "Every Monday she looked forward to going to work. There was nothing I could do to take her out on Sunday because she had to prepare to go to work," Singh said. She leaves behind a 15-year-old son, Gaurav. "I woke up thinking, 'Yay no school today because of the flood.' But it was the flood that took my mom away," Gaurav told abc13. "I would've rather gone to school than have this happen." Rajiv Singh had two major points he wanted to get across. "As a person who is driving, you want to be more careful," he said. He also says he wants the folks who handle the roads need to do better. "There are such intersections within the city's major areas where there are death traps sitting over there. The city has not done anything about them," he said.
Every potential high-water road crossing in the Hill Country has a flood marker on the side of the road. I don't really remember, do they have those in Houston? They should.