Houston Tropical Storm & Flood Injury Attorneys: Attorney911 Brings 27+ Years of Federal-Court Trial Experience to Harris, Galveston, Brazoria and Chambers Counties as Potential Storm Arthur Tracks the Upper Texas Coast, 4–8 Inches of Rain and 1–4 Feet of Storm Surge Forecast, We Preserve TranStar Footage Before the 30-Day Overwrite, the 60-Day Texas Tort Claims Act Notice Clock for TxDOT and Harris County Is Already Running, Ralph Manginello Federal-Court Admitted, Lupe Peña Former Insurance-Defense Attorney, Apartment Flooding, Commercial Vehicle Storm Crashes, TBI, Wrongful Death — Free 24/7 Consultation, No Fee Unless We Win, Hablamos Español, 1-888-ATTY-911
Right Now, in Houston, the Water Is Rising — and So Is the Clock on Your Rights The National Hurricane Center has issued its first advisory on Potential Storm One, the system that is expected to become Tropical Storm Arthur within forty-eight hours. The forecast track takes it across the northwestern Gulf and up the Upper Texas Coast, with landfall expected late Wednesday into Thursday somewhere near the Texas–Louisiana line. The Houston metropolitan area sits squarely inside the Tropical Storm Watch envelope. Widespread rainfall of four to eight inches is forecast, with isolated totals up to twelve inches. Wind gusts of thirty to forty miles an hour. Storm surge of one to four feet. The threat the forecasters keep using the words "life-threatening" to describe is not the wind. It is the water — the street flooding, the bayou overtopping, the flash flood that catches a driver on a familiar underpass and turns a commute into a recovery. If you are reading this in Houston, in Harris County, in Galveston, Brazoria, or Chambers County, the storm is not an abstraction to you. You are watching the radar. You are moving vehicles to higher ground. You are filling bathtubs. You are…