Sabine drops below I-10

The Sabine River remains in the major flooding stage, but certain areas could move into moderate flooding as water levels continue to drop, officials said Tuesday.

Roger Erickson, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service office in Lake Charles, said the Sabine River gauge at Deweyville, Texas, could reach moderate flooding by Thursday. That area includes the Starks region.

The Sabine will remain in major flooding stage around Interstate 10 and farther south into Western Sabine Lake until Saturday, Erickson said. The river’s gauge at Orange, Texas, read 7.4 feet as of Tuesday afternoon, above the major flooding stage of 6 feet.

“The good news is the water is not over the interstate anymore,” he said.

Heavy rainfall from Tropical Storm Harvey, combined with floodgates opening at the Toledo Bend Reservoir, caused the Sabine River to crest at over 31 feet near Deweyville on Friday. Major flooding occurs at 28 feet.

Erickson said the gauge at the Calcasieu River near Old Town Bay read 9.2 feet as of Tuesday afternoon, above the 8-foot major flooding stage. He said the level should fall to moderate flooding by Thursday.

The gauge for the Calcasieu River at Sam Houston Jones State Park read 6.5 feet on Tuesday, or minor flooding.

Erickson said the cool front making its way into the area today is not expected to bring any rain, so the river levels should drop as predicted. 

Hurricane Irma

Forecasters are keeping an eye on Hurricane Irma, which reached Category 5 strength Tuesday. The storm is expected to threaten Florida and Cuba, but Erickson said the big question remains when it will shift to the north.

“I don’t think it’ll be a threat to our region in this stage of the game,” he said. “We will keep monitoring it to see if there are any significant changes in the forecast track.”

With the Atlantic hurricane season lasting until Nov. 30, he said, residents should have a plan in place.

“Don’t put your guard down yet,” Erickson said.

 

Online: water.weather.gov.

SportsPlus

Local News

Hobbs column: The weekend the SEC went off the rails

Local News

Alternative school to relocate, expand for growth

Business

Names in the News: People shaping the future of Lake Area business

McNeese Sports

HCU runs over McNeese

Local News

Higgins implores Biden to use military aircraft to help Helene victims

Local News

Tropical depression forms in western Gulf

Jim Beam

Jim Beam column:Can tax reform really happen?

life

Moss Bluff man’s swordsmithing process matches period weapon was used

Local News

Attorney recalls landmark McNeese disabilities case

Local News

Trump, Georgia Gov. Kemp use hurricane recovery to make first 2024 appearance together

Local News

Protestors demonstrate outside LC courthouse after EPA ruling

life

PHOTO GALLERY: Stearman and Taildragger Fly-in

Local News

Scott Angelle commentary: Energy production ‘ain’t easy’ in Louisiana

Local News

Harris says DeRidder mayoral campaign built on transparency, integrity, honesty

Business

Welsh officials hope Frontage Road extension project leads to economic development

McNeese Sports

Cowboys looking to avoid trap

Local News

Tylar Gotreaux: My students are loved and have a place in my classroom

Crime

10/3: Calcasieu Parish Sheriff announces arrest list

Jim Gazzolo

Jim Gazzolo: Time to move up is now

life

Cal Cam Fair offers four days of family fun

Local News

After Hurricane Laura, couple moved to North Carolina: ‘Never in a million years did we think this would happen here’

McNeese Sports

Half the way back

Crime

Appeals court: Conviction in DeRidder kidnapping, murder stands

Business

Economist: SW La. economic forecast will depend on the election