News for North Texas

Storms dump rain on North Texas ahead of a cold front expected Friday

National Weather Service

North Texas saw much-needed rain Wednesday night into Thursday morning, but forecasters say the rain is on its way out. Still, watch out for urban flooding on roads and side streets throughout the day.

What's left of now-tropical depression Pamela is heading east, bringing rain mostly to areas east of I-35, the National Weather Service says. Some storms could redevelop as well.

The service's forecast calls for clearing skies this afternoon, with highs in the 80s.

A strong cold front is expected Friday morning, bringing cooler, drier air and wind. Afternoon high temperatures for North Texas should be in the 70s.

Tropical depression Pamela dissipated in northern Mexico on Wednesday night after slamming into the country’s Pacific coast as a hurricane, though forecasters warned that its rainy remnants still posed a flooding threat for parts of Texas and Oklahoma.

Pamela made landfall early Wednesday about 40 miles north of the resort and port city of Mazatlan, where civil defense officials said wind and rain caused minor flooding but did little damage. It gradually lost power while moving inland, weakening first to a tropical storm and then to a tropical depression.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center said Pamela’s winds had fallen to about 30 mph by the time it dissipated about 100 miles west of Laredo, Texas, which is on the border with Mexico.

Forecasters said further weakening was expected during the night, but warned that the storm was expected to drop 3 to 6 inches of rain across portions of central Texas and southeastern Oklahoma, with up to 8 inches in isolated spots. “This may result in considerable flash and urban flooding,” the hurricane center said.

The Associated Press contributed to this story.

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Justin Martin is KERA’s local host of All Things Considered, anchoring afternoon newscasts for KERA 90.1. Justin grew up in Mannheim, Germany, and avidly listened to the Voice of America and National Public Radio whenever stateside. He graduated from the American Broadcasting School, and further polished his skills with radio veteran Kris Anderson of the Mighty 690 fame, a 50,000 watt border-blaster operating out of Tijuana, Mexico. Justin has worked as holiday anchor for the USA Radio Network, serving the U.S. Armed Forces Network. He’s also hosted, produced, and engineered several shows, including the Southern Gospel Jubilee on 660 KSKY.