Street flooding was reported throughout New Orleans on Monday as a storm dropped at least 3 inches of rain on some parts of the city.

A flash flood warning was in effect until 3:15 p.m., according to the National Weather Service.

The city has suspended prohibitions on parking on the neutral ground and advised residents to move vehicles from low-lying areas, according to a tweet from the city.

In an interview with WWL-TV, Paul Rainwater, a member of the interim management team running the Sewerage & Water Board, said that two of the five pumps at Station 3 went down during the storm. Station 3 serves parts of Gentilly and moves water from areas as far away as Broadmoor to Lake Pontchartrain.

The two pumps represent about 27 percent of the drainage capacity at that pump station.

S&WB officials said about 4:10 p.m. Monday that the pumps had been returned to service though the cause of the outage remained unknown.

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The flooding is serious in some areas of the city. WWL-TV showed images of cars half-covered in water near an underpass at Gentilly Boulevard and Paris Avenue, and cars were stalled in floodwaters at Louisa Street and Chef Menteur Highway.

The city provides information on reports of street flooding at streetwise.nola.gov.

According to the S&WB's website, 109 of the drainage system's 120 pumps were operational Monday.

Broken pumps and a lack of power and staff have been blamed for exacerbating the Aug. 5 flooding in New Orleans.

New Orleans boil water advisory is lifted after no contamination found New Orleanians were told Thursday they could start drinking the water again.

Morris Jeff Community School announced Monday afternoon that it would be dismissing students at 2:30 p.m. due to flooding on nearby streets.