National Weather Service United States Department of Commerce

June 27, 2014

Flash Flood and Severe Weather Event

Robert Deal

 

A weak low pressure system was moving across the central plains forcing a broad area of high pressure out of the Louisiana area. In front of the low pressure system, a short wave moved across southeast Texas and southwest Louisiana causing quite a few showers and thunderstorms, some of which produced severe weather and flash flooding.

 

Surface map image

 
 

The morning quickly started with a storm moving on shore over Cameron parish producing a weak short lived tornado. This storm continued into Calcasieu parish where a Severe Thunderstorm Warning was issued for Calcasieu parish at 10:58 am. That storm produced locally heavy rainfall and the NWS issued a Flood Advisory at 11:23am with warning that 1-3 inches of rain could fall through 1pm along with a warning to never drive your vehicle into areas where the water covered the road.

At 11:39am the National Weather Service advised on social media that as the heavy rain continued local street flooding could occur in Lake Charles and Moss Bluff.

At 11:53am the NWS issued a new Severe Thunderstorm Warning for the same storm moving into eastern Calcasieu parish.

At 12:57pm, the NWS issued a Flash Flood Warning for Eastern Calcasieu Parish shown in the figure below.

 

 At 1:18 pm enough rain had fallen and more was forecasted that the NWS issued a Flash Flood Watch for Calcasieu Parish and the surrounding parishes westward through 12:00am. At 2:45pm a Tornado Warning was issued for eastern Calcasieu Parish and continued moving into Jefferson Davis Parish. 

Here is a video of the radar during the tornado.

 

At 3:26 pm, the NWS issued another Flash Flood Warning for Eastern Calcasieu parish including Iowa and Hayes explaining that 1-3 inches of rain had already fallen with the potential of 2-4 more inches through 5:00pm. 

 At 4:55pm those Flash Flood Warnings were transitioned into Flood Warnings that said 3-7 inches of rainfall had fallen, but stream gauges were indicating that water levels had crested and were beginning to fall slightly but that there were still many roads flooded across the warned area. At 9:45pm, River Flood Warnings were issued for both Old Town Bay and the Salt Water Barrier for minor flooding to be expected. As of 10:58pm the flood warning was expired as local law enforcement reported that most of the flooded roadways were now passable.

 
According to our data, the KLCH airport received 6.06 inches of rainfall between 11am and 2pm which put the event at between a 25 and 50-year event. The 6.94 inches breaks the daily rainfall record of 6.92 set by Tropical Storm Allison in 1989.
 

A total rainfall map for Calcasieu Parish follows below: