Many parts of Texas, including its biggest cities, were under flash
flood watches through Sunday or Monday. The remnants of Patricia, which
was downgraded to tropical storm status and was expected to reach
northern Mexico
by Saturday night, were expected add to the rain falling in South and
Central Texas, said Jesse Moore, a National Weather Service forecaster
in Fort Worth.
The storm system already moving through Texas dumped more than a foot of
rain on parts of the state on Friday, causing flooding that blocked
several major roadways.
A Union Pacific
freight train derailed before dawn on Saturday near Corsicana, about 50
miles south of Dallas, because a creek overflowed and washed away the
tracks, said Jeff DeGraff, a railroad spokesman. The two crew members
swam to safety and nobody was hurt, he said.
"They (crew) escaped the train after it stopped and swam to high
ground," DeGraff said. "A Navarro County rescue team was able to get in
and pull them to safety, they are back safe on dry ground."
One locomotive and several rail cars loaded with gravel went into the
water and were partly submerged, DeGraff said. He had no specifics on
how many cars derailed because crews couldn't reach the site due to
flooding.
Authorities on Saturday morning reopened a section of Interstate 45 near
Corsicana that was closed overnight due to flooding, backing up traffic
for 12 miles. Moore said that since Friday morning, Corsicana has
received 18 inches of rain and Powell has received 20 inches.
Flight tracker flightaware.com reported that about 100 Saturday flights
had been canceled at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport.
A flash flood watch was in effect for the Dallas, Fort Worth, Waco,
Austin and San Antonio areas through Sunday morning, according to the
National Weather Service. Corpus Christi, Laredo and Brownsville are
under a flash flood watch through Sunday night.
Forecasters say Houston and Galveston remain under a flash flood watch
through Monday morning, with possible coastal flooding concerns.
Patricia was the most powerful hurricane on record in the Western
Hemisphere and made landfall Friday along Mexico's Pacific Coast as a
Category 5 storm. It quickly lost power as it moved inland and appeared
to have caused remarkably little damage.
ABC
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