When your Honda Civic starts floating down the street, you probably assume your biggest problem is flood damage. In Charleston, South Carolina, you’d be wrong. As one drenched driver recently discovered, even Mother Nature can’t slow the city’s parking enforcement.
Anna Brooks (@anna.brooks4 on TikTok) found her gray Civic sitting in water up to its tires during a late-August deluge. That would’ve been bad enough. But when she waded over, she found parking tickets slapped to her window. Her video, part disbelief and part soggy rage, has since racked up more than 7.5 million views.
“My car floated here. I did not park on this (street),” Brooks says in the clip, while rain pours and tickets flap on her window like soggy receipts.
@anna.brooks4 I can’t control where it washes ashore 😭 ##fyp##ticket ##charleston##weathertok##weather ♬ original sound – anna brooks
Charleston had just taken a meteorological beating. Between August 22 and 24, a stalled cold front dumped more than 11 inches of rain on the Lowcountry. Mount Pleasant saw 12.10 inches, North Charleston 11.84, and West Ashley 11.41, according to the National Weather Service. Throw in high tides and maxed-out drainage systems, and the city became a saltwater obstacle course.
But as roadways turned into rivers, parking enforcement pressed on. Whether the officers were slogging in boots or issuing citations from kayaks remains unclear.
Here’s the thing: Brooks’ excuse isn’t far-fetched. FEMA and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration both confirm that as little as 12 inches of water can float a small car. A Civic is a textbook candidate. Which means yes, her car very likely drifted into a forbidden zone all on its own.
This isn’t unique to Charleston. Flood-displaced cars cropped up in Houston during Hurricane Harvey and in New York when Ida’s remnants swamped the city. The insult comes later—when soggy owners return to find tickets on cars that Mother Nature herself parked illegally.
Charleston hasn’t announced any flood-related amnesty for citations. City ordinance treats those bright-orange envelopes as binding, whether your car rolled into place by gravity, flood currents, or acts of Poseidon. Unless the city or state declares an official emergency—and they didn’t here—tickets stick.
Will Brooks contest the fines? Jury’s still out. Commenters flooded her TikTok with legal advice, sarcasm, and solidarity. One even claimed to be a lawyer and urged her to fight it.
Beyond one unlucky Civic, the story highlights a bigger issue: how cities handle stranded drivers in a changing climate. Flooding is getting worse, more frequent, and less predictable. If urban planners and local governments don’t adapt, they risk turning victims into violators with the stroke of a pen—or the slap of a citation under a windshield wiper.
For now, though, Charleston’s stance seems clear: rain or shine, drought or deluge, tickets will be written. And if your car floats into a no-parking zone? Better hope your TikTok goes viral—because sympathy from the internet might be the only amnesty you get.
Source: @anna.brooks4 via TikTok