Texarkana Gazette

STORM LINGERING IN SOUTHERN PLAINS; MORE FLOODING POSSIBLE

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DALLAS—A deadly storm that has caused flooding and coated parts of the southern Plains in ice during the Thanksgivi­ng holiday weekend dumped more rain on already swollen rivers in parts of North Texas and Arkansas on Sunday and made driving dangerous in parts of Oklahoma.

The band of storms that has been moving through parts of the Plains and the Midwest since Thursday has been blamed for at least 14 deaths, including eight in Texas and six in Kansas.

The Oklahoma Department of Transporta­tion said roads in the Panhandle remained slick after the slow-moving storm dropped ice and freezing rain in the region. Utilities in Oklahoma said more than 71,000 homes and business were without power as of Sunday afternoon because of the ice storms.

In parts of North Texas and Arkansas, the concern was flooding, with flood watches and warnings in effect through Sunday evening.

A 70-year-old woman whose car was swept away in Fort Worth on Friday remained missing Sunday. Authoritie­s had planned to send in divers to search for her, but rushing waters made recovery efforts too dangerous and difficult, Fort Worth Fire Department spokesman Kyle Clay said.

Flooding also resulted in a family having to be rescued from their home in Seagoville, southeast of Dallas. Three people and a dog were rescued from the home. Four other families chose to leave because of rising waters from a nearby creek, said Melinda Urbina, Dallas County Sheriff's Department spokeswoma­n.

River waters also lapped at the foundation­s of homes in Horseshoe Bend community in Parker County. Joel Kertok, the emergency management spokesman for the county west of Fort Worth, said the river there crested and had begun to recede Sunday as the rain diminished.

"We have some water that came right up to the homes," he said. "We were close."

In Texas, the areas of most concern sat near the swollen Trinity and Brazos rivers. Most of the rain was expected to taper off by Sunday night, but there remained a chance for showers into Monday, said Matt Bishop, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service in Fort Worth.

 ?? Associated Press ?? A layer of ice covers leaves Saturday in Oklahoma City. A slow-moving wintry storm system that has been blamed for more than a dozen deaths began moving eastward out of Texas on Saturday but kept coating some states to the north in ice, making driving...
Associated Press A layer of ice covers leaves Saturday in Oklahoma City. A slow-moving wintry storm system that has been blamed for more than a dozen deaths began moving eastward out of Texas on Saturday but kept coating some states to the north in ice, making driving...

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