Updated 7:30 p.m. Sunshine.

Updated 4 p.m. The National Weather Service forecast calls for more dangerous flooding through the rest of this holiday weekend. Light to moderate rain may still be possible Sunday evening and Monday afternoon and evening. This rainfall will worsen ongoing flooding and could lead to more flash flooding in some areas. Flash Flood Warnings/Watches extend through Monday morning across the state.
Some bands of rain affect mainly eastern two-thirds of the area late today into this evening. There remains a low chance for a few isolated storms across far western sections of Oklahoma late today that include a hail threat along with isolated heavy rain.
Updated 1 p.m. Rain continues across central and western portions of the state.
Radar at 12:56 PM shows persistent band of steady, occasionally heavy rain across central OK pic.twitter.com/mIAytXjRds
— NWS Norman (@NWSNorman) May 24, 2015
Updated 11:45 a.m. City of Oklahoma City officials offer call line to report homeowner damages.
Residents whose homes were flooded by weekend rains are asked to report damage to 211 beginning at noon today. #okwx pic.twitter.com/c4lSn8y7R2
— City of OKC (@cityofokc) May 24, 2015
The Oklahoma Department of Transportation lists statewide road closures (as of 8:45 a.m.). Meanwhile, Norman police report the following closures across flood-ravaged Cleveland County:
Flooding Road Closure updates: here are a few location updates. (This is not an exhaustive list)
— Norman Police (@normanokpd) May 24, 2015
156th & SH9:... http://t.co/xWNrXYyXBF
Updated 10 a.m. The National Weather Service in Norman has extended the flood warning until 2 p.m. for...
- Kingfisher County in Central Oklahoma...
- Blaine County in Northwestern Oklahoma...
- Eastern Washita County in Western Oklahoma...
- Caddo County in Southwestern Oklahoma...
- Payne County in Central Oklahoma...
- Canadian County in Central Oklahoma...
- Northwestern Pottawatomie County in Central Oklahoma...
- Northwestern Mcclain County in Central Oklahoma...
- Logan County in Central Oklahoma...
- Oklahoma County in Central Oklahoma...
- Lincoln County in Central Oklahoma...
- Southern Noble County in Northern Oklahoma...
- Southeastern Dewey County in Northwestern Oklahoma...
- Eastern Custer County in Western Oklahoma...
- Northeastern Kiowa County in Southwestern Oklahoma...
- Northern Grady County in Central Oklahoma...
- Northwestern Cleveland County in Central Oklahoma...
Original Post. Widespread flooding throughout Oklahoma is the result of the massive rain on Saturday. The storm caused at least 15 highways to be shut down, and it damaged a gas station and a mall in Oklahoma City.
The heavy rain caused the evacuation of a music festival west of Tulsa. Officials with the Rocklahoma festival in Pryor, about 50 miles west of Tulsa, urged attendees around 9 p.m. to head to their cars or the nearby camping area to wait out the incoming weather. They later stressed the campgrounds were not being evacuated.
Rogers County Emergency Management spokesman Thomas Hudson says a firefighter in the northeast Oklahoma town of Claremore died early Sunday after being swept away by floodwaters during a rescue.
Authorities in Cleveland and Comanche counties in Oklahoma say some were residents had to be rescued from attics and roofs.
Evacuation orders have been issued in Elk City, Oklahoma, and Wichita Falls, Texas amid warnings from the National Weather Service about potentially historic flooding.
Flash flood watches are in effect across Oklahoma as more thunderstorms move into the state.
The National Weather Service says a slow moving storm system will bring several rounds of heavy rainfall to Oklahoma through the long Memorial Day holiday weekend. Forecasters say the rainfall is likely to worsen ongoing river flooding and lead to flash flooding in some areas.
Between 2 and 5 inches of rainfall with locally higher amounts are possible through Monday morning in western, central and southern Oklahoma. Rainfall amounts of 3 to 6 inches will be common in eastern Oklahoma, with locally higher amounts that may approach 10 inches.
Heavy rainfall has resulted in flood warnings for several waterways in the state, including the Washita River at Anadarko and the Little River near Tecumseh.
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