Skip to main content

More showers, heavy downpours cover DC region

As a gray, rainy Monday ground on, parts of the D.C. region saw showers and heavy downpours Monday afternoon and evening.

A warm front touched off some scattered slow-moving thunderstorms and showers, Storm Team4 meteorologist Matt Ritter said.

During the afternoon and evening hours, torrential rain moved into a lot of areas, and the National Weather Service issued a flash flood warning until 2:30 a.m. Tuesday for parts of D.C.; Montgomery County in Maryland; and Arlington and Fairfax counties in Virginia.

More showers and storms are expected Tuesday afternoon.

The rest of the week will not be any better — that is, unless you love rain and storms. Wet weather is in the forecast for almost the entire workweek and could remain a nuisance into the weekend, as the remnants of Tropical Storm Fred move up the East Coast after landfall along the Gulf.



Earlier Monday, a flash food watch for part of the region expired.

High-standing water from brief morning showers led to some trouble on area roadways: In Centreville, Virginia, the WTOP Traffic Center reports some eastbound delays on Interstate 66 before Exit 53 due to flooding along the right side.

Late-night flooding over the weekend stranded vehicles in Alexandria and Arlington. Parts of Northern Virginia received over 5 inches of rain in under two hours overnight from Saturday into Sunday, when a lack of atmospheric steering caused storms to virtually stall over populated areas.


Forecast:

Monday night: Areas of rain and a lingering storm possible. Humid, with lows in the 70s.

Tuesday: Mostly to partly cloudy and humid, with showers and storms possible. Highs in the mid 80s.

Wednesday: Cloudy with storms possible. Humid. Highs in the mid 80s.

Thursday: Mostly cloudy with showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the mid to upper 80s.


Current conditions:

Task force sets out to improve DC’s flood readiness

D.C.'s multiagency flood task force will spend the next year developing plans for extreme wet weather and its impact on residents and infrastructure, with heavy rainfall events likely to grow worse amid shifting climate patterns. The Flood Task Force for the District of Columbia — established by City Administrator Kevin Donahue in the aftermath of dramatic flash flooding on Sept. 10, 2020 — will produce a report including action plans for repairing flood damage in low-income homes and vulnerable neighborhoods, responding to sewer line backups, flood-proofing buildings and developing flood-mitigating infrastructure.
Read Next Story