ed lavandera in galveston, texas, and ed lavandera in the weather center. what are you seeing? reporter: jake, things starting to get interesting. sustained winds picked up as has the rain. we ve been at the sea wall here in corpus christi and have seen this water rise slowly throughout the day. it was a little while ago, the water wasn t as far as it is here. seeing maybe a foot of water increase, and we re going to see residents, all morning long, residents who have chosen not to evacuate. one of the last few about to evacuate. what kept you here so long? like i said, i work in ode a odessa. take care of my house. board it down. get prepared for it. this will be the first time being here in a storm here in corpus since i lived here, and i just wanted to see the side of the water before i take off north. reporter: do you believe the
even with all of this water increase, the water levels are expected to be just around average or slightly below average on historical levels still. people on the water as far as the lakes go, they re hoping for a couple more winters like this to get the water levels back up to where they should be. i m okay without that, though. jenna: brighter days ahead. that s the theme we re looking for and you delivered, gart. thank you very much for that. gregg: obama administration admitting that health insurance enrollment has been low under obamacare. now a new survey suggests it could stay that way. and you have to expect the unexpected in live television but this? oh, yeah. that s not just the cameraman shaking the camera. a strong quake throwing the seasoned anchors for a loop in the middle of a news cast. we ll show you where this happened. co: i ve always found you don t know you need a hotel room