South Beach tourists brave the rain in a tropical storm in Florida. Photo / AP
South Beach tourists brave the rain in a tropical storm in Florida. Photo / AP
Tropical Storm Gordon lashed South Florida with heavy rains and high winds today and is expected to strengthen into a hurricane when it hits the central US Gulf Coast.
Gordon formed into a tropical storm near the Florida Keys as it moved west-northwest at 28 km/h. The storm is expectedto reach hurricane strength when it hits the Gulf Coast, including coastal Mississippi, tomorrow. From there, it is forecast to move inland over the lower Mississippi Valley on Thursday.
The National Hurricane Centre said the storm was centered 150km west of Fort Myers, Florida. Maximum sustained winds were clocked at 95 km/h.
A hurricane warning was put into effect for the area stretching from the mouth of the Pearl River in Mississippi to the Alabama-Florida border. As much as 20cm of rain could fall in some parts of the Gulf states until Friday.
The Miami-based centre said the storm is also expected to bring "life-threatening" storm surge to portions of the central Gulf Coast. A storm surge warning has been issued for the area stretching from Shell Beach, Louisiana, to Dauphin Island, Alabama. The warning means there is danger of life-threatening inundation. The region could see rising waters of 1m to 1.5m.
"The deepest water will occur along the immediate coast near and to the east of the landfall location, where the surge will be accompanied by large waves," the centre said.
Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards declared a state of emergency and said 200 National Guard troops will be deployed to southeastern Louisiana.
The storm's predicted track had shifted slightly east, meaning Louisiana is currently just outside the area under the hurricane warning. Still, the southeastern part of the state remains under a tropical storm warning and residents need to be prepared for the storm to shift west, Edwards said.
"This storm has every possibility to track further in our direction," Edwards said during a news conference.
New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell said the city has "the pumps and the power" needed to protect residents. But authorities issued a voluntary evacuation order for areas outside the city's levee protection system, including the Venetian Isles, Lake Saint Catherine and Irish Bayou areas.
A man carries a barricade to block the street along The Strand after heavy rain flooded many roadways in Galveston, Texas. Photo / AP
Cantrell urged residents within the levee protection area to stock up on supplies and shelter in place.
Miami Beach Police said via Twitter that the Labour Day holiday was "NOT a beach day," with rough surf and potential rip currents. Red flags flew over Pensacola-area beaches in Florida's Panhandle, where swimming and wading in the Gulf of Mexico was prohibited. More than 4000 Florida Power & Light customers lost power due to weather conditions.
The National Weather Service said conditions were "possible" for tornadoes in the affected parts of South Florida.
The storm left many businesses on Florida's Gulf Coast feeling shortchanged by the holiday weekend. The area has already been heavily affected by this summer's so-called "red tide"— massive algae blooms that have caused waves of dead marine life to wash up along the coast.
Jenna Wright, owner of a coffee shop in Naples, Florida, told the Naples Daily News that she had expected higher numbers for the Labour Day weekend.
"This is normally a decent weekend, but the storm and red tide aren't helping," Wright said. "We're a beach coffee shop, and if people can't go to the beach, then we won't get any customers."
- AP
Tropical Storm Gordon lashes south Florida. Photo / AP