Excessive Rainfall Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 428 PM EDT Fri May 3 2024 Day 1 Valid 16Z Fri May 03 2024 - 12Z Sat May 04 2024 ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF SOUTHEAST TEXAS... ...16Z Update... ...Southeast Texas... In coordination with HGX/Houston, TX; LCH/Lake Charles, LA; and FWD/Fort Worth, TX forecast offices, a Moderate Risk upgrade was included with this update for portions of southeast Texas. Persistent backbuilding storms producing 1-2 inches per hour rainfall rates has been occurring over areas that have been pushing a foot of new rain over the past 48 hours. For more details please see the corresponding MPD 216 at www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/metwatch/metwatch_mpd_multi.php?md=0216&yr=2024. ...Arklatex... Another bigger change made with this update was to trim down the inherited Slight out of the Arklatex region, confining it to the extremely hard hit southeast Texas, and into southwest Louisiana. The ongoing MCS at the time of this writing over eastern Arkansas and northern Louisiana is weakening and breaking into component convection. While those stronger storms will likely hang on a bit longer, the increasingly isolated nature of the convection suggests that any potential resultant flash flooding will be isolated, and more indicative of a Marginal. Further, once the MCS weakens, dissipates and pushes east into Mississippi, guidance is in good agreement that that will be the end of the day's (and tonight's) rain for that area. Of course, there's always potential in this very moisture-rich environment that popup convection could redevelop, but without much CAMs indication of that, that too suggests the flash flooding threat is waning. ...Central Plains... The Marginal Risk area in Kansas has been expanded a bit to the south in deference to the newest 12Z HRRR suggesting a line of convection will develop this afternoon and tonight over the heart of the state. This in turn would limit development further north across Nebraska. Once again the CAMs have been performing poorly so the Marginal area is really a hedge to cover the wide range of possibilities of convective evolution. For Kansas, the southwestern part of the state remains very dry as far as soil moisture conditions are concerned, so the Marginal was to cover potential training convection. Further south into Oklahoma, guidance has been trending downward for most of the state, so the Marginal was removed with this update. Dry line convection likely across west Texas may sneak across the Red River into Oklahoma, so that potential will need to continue to be monitored. ...Central Appalachians... Shower activity from Tennessee to Ohio may develop into more robust, albeit scattered convection across the Marginal Risk area this afternoon and evening. Soils are still a bit sensitive here, but the rainfall is not expected to be notable, so the Marginal covers the isolated flash flooding risk here. Wegman