| Rivers still flooded in Texas and Oklahoma; 3 dead after record rains Twelve people are missing in Hays County, Texas, after severe flooding in the area, county emergency coordinator Kharley Smith said Monday morning. The missing are from families who had gathered for the long weekend and likely include children, added Ken Bell, emergency coordinator for San Marcos. [Original story posted at 9:16 a.m. ET] A day after record-setting rains left three people dead and washed away hundreds of homes in Texas and Oklahoma, the heavens are easing up. But that doesn't mean the threat is gone. But the torrents that those storms dumped are still too much for river and creek banks to contain, and runoff was still peaking early Monday, threatening continued flooding, the National Weather Service warned. On top of that, rain relief is not coming to everyone. Forecasters warned that with the ground already saturated, even just a small amount of new rain could still have devastating consemiquences. "Only an inch or two of rainfall could quickly lead to more flash flooding concerns," the weather service said.
Texas homes wiped away
In Hays County, Texas, just outside of Austin, up to 400 homes have washed away. "We do have whole streets that have maybe one or two houses left on them, and the rest are just slabs," said Kharley Smith, emergency management coordinator. More than 1,000 more homes were damaged, and waters washed two main bridges away in Hays. Thunderstorms could dump 1 to 3 more inches of rain there on Monday -- 5 inches in isolated areas, the weather service said. And while flood warnings and watches were winding down in most places overnight, a new flood watch loomed from Monday in to early Tuesday for Hays County. 
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[size=1.125]Powerful flood sweeps SUV away[size=1.125]02:03
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One person was confirmed dead there in the town of San Marcos, and bad weather hindered the search for missing people on Sunday. Rescuers used helicopters to heave stranded residents off the rooftops of buildings surrounded by flood lakes, where normally fields stand. The Blanco River, which flows through San Marcos, shot past its previous flood record of 33.3 feet to a new one of 40.21 feet late Saturday. Hours earlier, it ran just over 5 feet deep, according to weather service data. Fortunately, its flood waters should make a rapid retreat.
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