As of mid-day Sunday, the city of Sugar Land issued a statement saying drinking water is safe, and there are no current plans for boil notices. The city is still planning for street flooding and isolated tornadoes and monitoring river conditions, according to a statement.
Update posted to storm page 8/27 12:27 p.m.: https://t.co/o7jMYQYoVE.
— City of Sugar Land (@SugarLandtxgov) August 27, 2017
Fort Bend ISD to remain closed through Tuesday, September 5. READ MORE: https://t.co/OefGow6nxj pic.twitter.com/3Ri5AnqmfD
— Fort Bend ISD (@FortBendISD) August 27, 2017
U.S. Highway 59 northbound is closed. Exit Kirkwood. For preparedness information, visit https://t.co/6OWQ7kwv77.
— City of Sugar Land (@SugarLandtxgov) August 27, 2017
An interactive GIS map is also available for residents to track road blocks and high water areas: https://t.co/pvt9thl9m6 #MissouriCityTX
— Missouri City, TX (@MissouriCityTX) August 27, 2017
Before & after in Riverstone. Highest I've seen since living here (Yes that is a alligator in the first picture) @KPRC2 pic.twitter.com/xQ2bcx1qz8
— Usman H. (@uhasib) August 27, 2017
@KPRC2 Aerial view of damage caused by Hurricane Harvey in Sienna Plantation #HurricaneHarvey #houstonflood #siennaplantation #DJISpark pic.twitter.com/78VxVypdOY
— Loven Panes (@lovenpanes) August 27, 2017
Lake Olympia Subdivision! The Lake has moved from the back to the front!??? pic.twitter.com/wJMdABDbAL
— The Wings Track Club (@TheWingsTrack) August 27, 2017
Missouri City Lake Olympia Street Flooding. @KPRC2WEATHER #stormpins #missouricity #texas #harvey #houston pic.twitter.com/ixDPr1vcYb
— Shadow_Hunter (@Shadow_Hunter) August 27, 2017