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A flooded Texas river rose 35 feet in a day and crushed a bridge

Posted at 7:22 PM, Oct 16, 2018
and last updated 2018-10-16 19:22:45-04

Heavy rain caused a central Texas river to rise to a near-record level in about a day, leading to a bridge collapse, flooded homes and evacuations.

The Llano River rose to nearly 40 feet Tuesday in the city of Llano — about 35 feet higher than it was just 24 hours earlier — after 8 to 10 inches of rain fell in the area over the past two days, the National Weather Service said.

A few miles away, in Kingsland, the swollen river rushed against the top of the RM 2900 bridge for hours, eventually causing it to collapse, video from CNN affiliate KEYE showed. No one appeared to be on the bridge, and no injuries were immediately reported.

Video from Darlene Walthall also showed the river washing over the span before the collapse.

The Llano County Office of Emergency Management ordered people living within a quarter mile of the river to evacuate Tuesday morning.

The Llano River meets the Colorado River in Kingsland. Houses near the Colorado were flooded, resident Terri Kleen said. Video that she posted to Instagram showed water rising to the top of boat dock structures.

View this post on Instagram

1st wildfires during the summer, now flooding. We are ok, but my neighbors just down the street from us are not so lucky. Homes flooded, boat docks gone or under water. 2 County officers & 2 DPS Troopers just passed my house to help some of those neighbors. @zackshieldsonfox7 @scottfisherfox7

A post shared by Bentley, Frostie & Flapjack (@bentley_frostie_flapjack) on

Law enforcement officers were helping people from flooded areas, she said.

Gov. Greg Abbot on Tuesday issued a state disaster declaration for 18 counties affected by the flooding, including Llano County.

“Texas is taking immediate action to respond to the threat of recent severe weather and flooding across the state,” the governor said in a statement.

In nearby Marble Falls, Dale Heath recorded video of a car stuck in rushing water from a swollen Backbone Creek, a Colorado River tributary.

The flooded communities are about a 90-minute drive northwest of Austin.

The Llano River’s crest of 39.91 feet in Llano was just below the record high of 41.5 feet there in June 1935.

The river is expected to recede through Tuesday afternoon, but should stay in the major flood stage — over 23 feet — though Wednesday morning.