Where did the heavy rain cause problems in Somerset County? Here's a look.

Somerset County is experiencing flooded roadways and rising river levels for a second consecutive day.

Brian Ishman, a shift supervisor at Somerset County 911, said that emergency dispatchers were "been busy all day" on Wednesday, fielding phone calls advising of flooded roadways and basements in the county, especially in the Meyersdale and Confluence areas.

Ishman said the number of calls were about the same as Tuesday, when heavy rainfall started to cause problems with road closures and flooding of low-lying and poor drainage areas.

Additional rounds of heavy rain occurring on Tuesday night and Wednesday morning have only added to the flooding issues since then.

The Meyersdale Volunteer Fire Department posted at its Facebook page on Wednesday that several roads such as Large Street, Mount Davis Road, Beachley Street, parts of Meyersdale Borough and Summit Township were experiencing flooding. The high water mark on the Broadway Street bridge showed the Casselman River water level was at 11 feet, 8 inches Wednesday afternoon.

In Confluence, the National Weather Service issued a Flood Warning early Wednesday for the Youghiogheny River, noting that the river was expected to rise above flood stage (12 feet) to 12.4 feet in the afternoon before falling below flood stage late Wednesday.

In the northern part of the county, flooded basements were reported in Windber Borough, along the Somerset Pike in Conemaugh Township and in Hooversville.

Rain was continuing to fall across the county on Wednesday afternoon, and a Flood Watch was in effect for Somerset County until 8 a.m. Thursday.

This article originally appeared on The Daily American: Heavy rain causes road, river flooding in Somerset County