- Flood Watch issued as thunderstorms could ruin Labor Day plans in San Antonio
- Flood watch in effect for the Austin area from noon Sunday until noon on Monday
- A Texas congressman is quietly helping Elon Musk pitch building $760M tunnels under Houston to ease flooding
- TribCast: How will Texas protect its campers from future floods?
- San Antonio Zoo to disburse 20,000 complimentary tickets to folks affected by Texas floods
Victims still recovering 6 months after Hurricane Florence made landfall

Florence grew to a Category 4 storm with sustained winds of 140 miles per hour. However, the storm weakened to a Category 1 before making landfall Sept. 14 at 7:15 a.m. just south of Wrightsville Beach.
Despite its weakened state, Florence still packed quite a punch because it stalled over North Carolina–moving at about 2-3 miles per hour.
Florence dumped record amounts of rainfall, causing massive damage and power outages. Fifty-three people died from the storm, and thousands of families were forced from their homes.
Many of those families are still unable to get back to their homes, and now funding to help them in their temporary housing situations is running out.
Among the victims of the storm, 224 people remain stranded in hotels because the damage to their homes was so extensive. The funding allowing them to stay in those hotels is expected to run out March 15.
The next step for these people remains unknown.
Stay with ABC11 throughout the day Thursday, as we push for answers for Hurricane Florence victims. We’ll also be highlighting how far recovery efforts have come and how much farther they have to go before everything is back to normal.
Copyright © 2019 WTVD-TV. All Rights Reserved.