Child dies after being swept away by flood in Texas

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A man wades through floodwaters from Peach Creek to get to his house, New Caney, Texas, May 3, 2024. /CFP

A man wades through floodwaters from Peach Creek to get to his house, New Caney, Texas, May 3, 2024. /CFP

Storms in Texas brought additional rain Sunday to the already saturated Houston area where hundreds of people have been rescued from flooded homes and roads, while to the north in the Fort Worth area, a child died after being swept away when the car he was traveling in got stuck in floodwaters.

Over the last week, areas near Lake Livingston, located northeast of Houston, have gotten upwards of 58 centimeters of rain, National Weather Service meteorologist Jimmy Fowler said on Sunday afternoon. Meanwhile, areas in northeastern Harris County, the nation's third-largest county that includes Houston, had a range of 15 centimeters to almost 43 centimeters of rain in that same period, he added. 

Scattered showers in the Houston area on Sunday brought light to moderate rainfall, Fowler said.

"With the rainfall that fell overnight plus this morning it just kind of prolonged the river flooding that we were experiencing," he said.

He said the rain would taper off in the evening, with no heavy rain events expected in the next week or so.

In Johnson County, located south of Fort Worth, a 5-year-old boy died when he was swept away after the vehicle he was riding in became stuck in swift-moving water near the community of Lillian just before 2 a.m. Sunday, an official said.

The child and two adults were trying to get to dry ground when they were swept away, Jamie Moore, the Johnson County Emergency Management director, wrote in a Facebook post.

The two adults were rescued around 5 a.m. and taken to a hospital, while the child was found dead around 7:20 a.m. in the water, Moore said.

Storms brought as 23 centimeters of rain in a span of six to eight hours in some areas from central Texas to the Dallas-Fort Worth area overnight, said National Weather Service meteorologist Matt Stalley. He said the rains washed out some roads west of Waco.

Source(s): AP