- 'Takes a village to rebuild': Survivor of 1987 flash flood, committed to helping those impacted by latest tragedy
- 'Takes a village to rebuild': Survivor of 1987 flash flood, committed to helping those impacted by latest tragedy
- 'Beautiful, but it's also hazardous' | Family recounts decades of floods along Guadalupe River
- 'Beautiful, but it's also hazardous' | Family recounts decades of floods along Guadalupe River
- Olivia Chappins has seen devastating floods along the Guadalupe over the years. None were like this one.
Tropical Storm Arthur crawls closer to North Carolina coast

Share on Facebook
Tweet on Twitter
MIAMI (AP) — Tropical Storm Arthur is crawling closer to the North Carolina coast, amid threats of some minor flooding and rough seas as the system moves off the Southeast seaboard.
Arthur formed Saturday off Florida, marking the sixth straight year a named storm has developed before the official June 1 start of the Atlantic hurricane season.
The National Hurricane Center in Miami issued a tropical storm warning for North Carolina’s Outer Banks on Sunday.
At 11 p.m. EDT, the storm’s center was located about 210 miles south-southwest of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina.
Arthur had top sustained winds of 45 mph as it moved north-northeast.