Hmmmmmmm.
If you can see the holes, they are big enough to drain.
If there is some kind of grunge growing there, it could be obstructing the holes. To wit:
The "size" of a molecule is not unique, that is, the bond lengths and bond
angles of the same bond type vary somewhat for different molecules. For H2O,
the H-O-H bond angle is about 104.5 degrees and the H--O bond distance is
about 1.0 Angstroms (100 picometers = 100pm). METHYL ALCOHOL is smaller than
ethyl alcohol. For METHYL ALCOHOL the structural parameters are: R(C--H) =
109 pm; R(C--O) = 1.43 pm; R(O--H) = 0.94. The bond angles are (H--C--H) =
108.6; (C--O--H) = 108.5. These are very nearly the same values for ethyl
alcohol with the additional angle (C--C--C) = 109.5 and the bond length is
about R(C--C) = 154 pm. You could do the geometry and calculate the overall
size of the molecule by the vector addition of the (C--H),
(C--C), (C--O), and (O--H) bonds to estimate the overall size. Even without
doing so it is clear that the "size" of the ethanol molecule is
significantly larger than the "size" of a water molecule.
Chances are the holes are plugged. A toothpick may solve the problem. Of course, if the water is ponding in the forward section of the storage compartment, and the drain holes are in the aft section, then some other physics enter into the analysis.
Ken