More where that came from: Plenty of rain en route for today

Published 2:51 pm Thursday, June 6, 2019

Southeast Texas remained under a flash flood warning, then a watch as rain continued to pelt the already soggy area Wednesday.

Rob Megnia with the National Weather Service in Lake Charles said the Port Arthur area had seen anywhere from 2 1/2 to 4 inches of rain Wednesday with another 4-6 inches possible by Thursday morning.

“We are hoping for the rainfall to taper off by mid-morning to early afternoon (Thursday),” Megnia said.

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The meteorologist hadn’t heard reports of any major flooding and believes that is because the rain has occurred over an eight-hour period.

 

Drainage District

Jefferson County Drainage District No. 7 has been working steadily with the current rain event.

Supervisor Ronnie Hollier said they first manned the station around 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, then the rain subsided and the crew was sent home. They came back around 6 a.m. Wednesday and had been pumping water ever since.

All essential pump stations were manned and there were crews throughout the district — Port Arthur, Groves, Nederland and Port Neches — checking the DD7 ditches for debris.

In addition, crews began pumping down Alligator Bayou Station a day or so before the rain to create more storage and will continue to do so a day or two after the rain has passed.

To get a better understanding of how the drainage system works, go to www.dd7.org or Jefferson County Drainage District No. 7 Facebook page to see an interactive map.

The Facebook page also has updates from DD7.

 

See also: 6-9 inches of rain in Jefferson County from storms