Overview
- Mexico City logged about 91 millimeters of rain on Sept. 27, the most in 34 years and roughly 31 million cubic meters of water, with Iztapalapa and Tláhuac among the hardest hit areas.
- Authorities report roughly 2,000 homes damaged in the capital, say Operativo Tlaloque reduced about 90% of inundations in under 24 hours, and maintain 16 command posts for cleanup and assistance.
- In Nezahualcóyotl, municipal teams deployed to dozens of affected colonias, temporary shelters opened, and CONAGUA provided machinery and personnel for technical support and drainage work.
- Jalisco’s Tototlán saw the Río El Tajo overflow, with at least 450 homes affected across six colonias, a municipal command post coordinating rescues and censuses, and shelters and DIF aid activated.
- Relief funding is flowing: Jalisco delivered about 3.8 million pesos in direct cash to El Salto families across 140 supports, CDMX tallied 65 million pesos in prior emergency aid, AXA insurance will be activated, and officials outlined new drainage works and metropolitan coordination.