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San Marcos, Texas • Record rainfall wreaked havoc Sunday across a swath of Texas and the Midwest, causing flash floods in normally dry riverbeds, spawning tornadoes and forcing at least 2,000 people to flee.
Tornadoes struck, severely damaging an apartment complex in Houston. A firefighter in Oklahoma was swept to his death while trying to rescue 10 people in high water. And the body of a man was recovered from a flooded area along the Blanco River, which rose 26 feet in just one hour and left piles of wreckage 20 feet high, authorities in Texas said.
"It looks pretty bad out there," said Kharley Smith, Hays County emergency management coordinator, describing the destruction in Wimberley, a community that is part of a fast-growing corridor between Austin and San Antonio. "We do have whole streets with maybe one or two houses left on them, and the rest are just slabs," she said.
From 350 to 400 homes were destroyed in Wimberley, many of them washed away, Smith said. Several people remained missing.
Authorities also warned people to honor a nighttime curfew and stay away from damaged areas, since more rain was on the way.
Rivers rose so fast that whole communities woke up Sunday surrounded by water. The Blanco crested above 40 feet more than triple its flood stage of 13 feet swamping Interstate 35 and forcing parts of the busy north-south highway to close.
Dallas also faced severe flooding from the Trinity River, which was expected to crest near 40 feet Monday. The Red and Wichita rivers also rose far above flood stage.
Heather Ruiz returned from work early Sunday to ankle-deep water and a muddy couch inside her home in San Marcos. She wasn't sure what to do next. "Pick up the pieces and start all over, I guess."
This May is already the wettest on record for several cities in the southern Plains states, with days still to go and more rain on the way. So far this year, Oklahoma City has recorded 27.37 inches of rain. Last year, the state's capital received only 4.29 inches.
The reasons include a prolonged warming of Pacific Ocean sea surface temperatures, which generally results in cooler air, coupled with an active southern jet stream and plentiful moisture from the Gulf of Mexico, said meteorologist Forrest Mitchell at the National Weather Service office in Norman, Okla.
"It looks like the rainfall that we're getting now may actually officially end the drought," which has gripped the southern Plains states for years, Mitchell said, noting that moisture now reaches about 2 feet below the surface of the soil and many lakes and reservoirs are full.
Wichita Falls was so dry at one point that it had to get Texas regulatory approval to recycle and treat its wastewater as drinking water dried up. By Sunday, the city reached a rainfall record, nearly 14 inches so far in May.
The storm system was pushing northeast Sunday after moving across parts of Colorado, central and North Texas and most of Oklahoma.
About 1,000 people were evacuated from homes in Central Texas, where rescuers pulled dozens of people from high water overnight.
Five San Marcos police cars were washed away and a fire station was flooded, said Kristi Wyatt, a spokeswoman for San Marcos. Wyatt said about 1,000 homes were damaged in San Marcos, Wimberley and elsewhere in Hays County.
A tornado briefly touched down in Houston, damaging rooftops, toppling trees, blowing out windows and sending at least two people to a hospital. The weather service said the tornado struck with winds of about 100 mph at around 6:30 a.m. Sunday. Fire officials said 10 apartments were heavily damaged and 40 others sustained lesser damage.
About 50 miles north of the city, about 1,000 people were preparing to spend the night away from home. The Montgomery County Office of Emergency Management issued a mandatory evacuation order to more than 400 homes near an earthen dam at Lake Lewis that was at risk of failing due to the heavy rains.
In northeast Oklahoma, Capt. Jason Farley was helping rescue people at about 11:30 p.m. Saturday when he was swept into a drainage ditch. The body of the 20-year veteran was recovered an hour and a half later, Claremore Fire Chief Sean Douglas said.
Oklahoma City set a new monthly rainfall total this weekend 18.2 inches through Saturday, beating the previous one of 14.5 in 2013.