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Flooded Fourth: Several Texas lakes closed due to rising water

By: Staff and Wire

Issue date: 7/3/07 Section: News
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Several streets were reported closed because of high water in Abilene. A flash flood warning was in effect for several North and West Texas counties Monday evening.

Meanwhile, hundreds of North Texas residents near two rain-swollen rivers remained displaced from their homes because of flooding, power outages or fears of contaminated waters.

In Wichita Falls, about 125 miles northwest of Fort Worth, the 600 homes evacuated last week remain without power, including 400 that are flooded, said city spokesman Barry Levy. Some businesses also flooded.

"It could be anything from wet carpet to (water) halfway up the house," Levy said.

The water has started to recede, and officials may allow folks to return home later this week, Levy said. In the meantime, Health Department officials have administered tetanus vaccinations to more than 300 people, Levy said. The city's drinking water is safe and was not affected by floodwaters, he added.

In Parker County, west of Fort Worth, about 200 of the 2,000 residents living along the Brazos River still cannot get into their homes or travel trailers because of flooding. All residents were allowed to return over the weekend after evacuations late last week.

The Brazos had receded and was about half a foot below the flood stage Monday night. But it was expected to rise because another flood gate was opened Monday morning at Possum Kingdom Lake's dam, a tactic done to prevent the dam from breaking when more heavy rain comes.

"We're not at all saying we're out of the woods," Parker County spokesman Joel Kertok said.

A flash flood watch was in effect for 46 North Texas counties through Wednesday and for 13 West Texas counties and 26 Central Texas counties through Tuesday, according to the National Weather Service.

In Central Texas, a temporary water pump in Marble Falls has restored water to 95 percent of its normal capacity, but city officials were awaiting tests to determine if the water was contaminated. Residents were being advised not to drink or bathe in the city's tap water, spokeswoman Christina Laine said.

Meanwhile, two Leander men remained missing after their SUV was found submerged in a creek near Smithwick late Thursday. Numerous agencies have searched for the men along Hickory Creek and downstream toward Lake Travis in Travis County, and they will continue searching Tuesday, said Lt. Dwight Hardin of the Burnet County Sheriff's Department.

Storms are blamed for at least 11 deaths in Texas since mid-June.

President Bush declared his home state a major disaster area Friday, ordering federal aid for six counties. Officials in Parker County have asked to be added to that list.

- Associated Press writer April Castro in Austin and Battalion News Editor Kari Miller contributed to this report.
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Viewing Comments 1 - 2 of 2

Jessica

posted 7/03/07 @ 10:55 AM CST

I was wondering what your sources were for this article. I am at lake conroe right now and we have not been notified of any closoure and there are plent of boats on the lake. (Continued…)

Matt

posted 7/03/07 @ 12:55 PM CST

Yep, nothing on the SJRA website, and the lake is only a couple of inches over normal pool... would be interesting to know how the batt determined that it was closed. (Continued…)

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