Baltimore Sun

Beta churning closer to Texas, La.

Tropical storm adds stress in busy hurricane season

- By Juan A. Lozano

HOUSTON — Tropical Storm Beta trudged toward the coasts of Texas and Louisiana on Sunday, threatenin­g to bring more rain, wind and stress to a part of the country that has already been drenched and battered during this year’s unusually busy hurricane season.

While Beta could bring up to 20 inches of rain to some areas of Texas and Louisiana over the next several days, it was no longer expected to reach hurricane intensity, the National Weather Service said Sunday. Beta was moving a little faster and was set to make landfall along Texas' central or upper Gulf Coast late Monday night, the National Hurricane Center said. It was then expected to move northeastw­ard along the coast and head into Louisiana sometime midweek, with rainfall as its biggest threat.

Forecaster­s said Beta was not expected to bring the same amount of rainfall that Texas experience­d during either Hurricane Harvey in 2017 or Tropical Storm Imelda last year. Harvey dumped more than 50 inches of rain on Houston and caused $125 billion in damage in Texas. Imelda, which hit Southeast Texas, was one of the wettest cyclones on record.

The first rain bands from Beta reached the Texas coast Sunday, but the heaviest rain wasn’t expected to arrive until Monday into Tuesday.

In low-lying Galveston, which has seen more than its share of tropical weather over the years, officials didn’t expect to issue a mandatory evacuation order but they advised people to have supplies ready in case they have to stay home

for several days if roads are flooded. The coastal city about 50 miles south of Houston could get up to 15 inches of rain.

“We’re not incredibly worried,” Galveston resident Nancy Kitcheo said Sunday.

Kitcheo, 49, and her family had evacuated last month when forecasts suggested Hurricane Laura could make landfall near Galveston, but they’re planning to buy supplies and wait out Beta. Laura ended up making landfall in neighborin­g Louisiana.

Kitcheo, whose home is 18 feet above the ground on stilts, said she expected her street to be impassable as water from rising tides was already flooding neighborin­g roadways on Sunday.

“This has definitely been more stressful, this hurri

cane season,“she said.

Galveston, which has about 50,000 residents, was the site of the deadliest hurricane in U.S. history, a 1900 storm that killed an estimated 6,000 people. The city was also hit hard in 2008 by Hurricane Ike, which caused about $30 billion in damage. Kitcheo’s previous home was heavily damaged during Ike and had to be torn down.

Beta was churning slowly through the Gulf of Mexico on Sunday morning about 120 miles south-southeast of Galveston, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said. The storm had maximum sustained winds of 60 mph and was moving westnorthw­est at 6 mph.

Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner on Sunday said while Beta was not expected to bring rain like

Harvey, he cautioned residents.

“Be weather aware because things can change. This is 2020 and so we have to expect the unexpected,” said Turner, adding the city expected to activate its emergency center on Monday.

In Victoria County, about 120 miles southwest of Houston, officials asked residents to prepare for up to 10 to 15 inches of rain.

“As with any event, panic is never helpful or necessary, but preparatio­n is, and now is the time to finalize those plans,” said County Judge Ben Zeller, the top elected official in Victoria County.

Beta is forecast to dump heavy rain on the southweste­rn corner of Louisiana three weeks after the same area got pounded by Hurri

cane Laura. More than 41,000 homes and businesses remain without electricit­y, and Beta could add to that figure by toppling trees that were left leaning by the previous storm, said meteorolog­ist Donald Jones of the National Weather Service office in Lake Charles, Louisiana. Storm debris from Laura clogging draining ditches in hard-hit areas such as Lake Charles could increase the threat of flooding.

Beta was one of three named storms whirling in the Atlantic basin during an exceptiona­lly busy hurricane season. If the system makes landfall in Texas, it would be the ninth named storm to make landfall in the continenta­l U.S. in 2020. That would tie a record set in 1916, according to Colorado State University hurricane researcher Phil Klotzbach.

Forecaster­s ran out of traditiona­l storm names last week, forcing the use of the Greek alphabet for only the second time since the 1950s.

A stretch of the Gulf Coast from Port Aransas, Texas, about 165 miles southwest of Galveston, to Morgan City, Louisiana, 80 miles west of New Orleans, was under a tropical storm warning Sunday.

Meanwhile, Teddy remained a powerful hurricane Sunday, with maximum sustained winds of 105 mph and moving northwest at 9 mph. Teddy was centered 245 miles southsouth­east of Bermuda less than a week after Hurricane Paulette made landfall in the British territory. Atropical storm warning was in effect for Bermuda.

 ?? COURTNEY SACCO/CORPUS CHRISTI CALLER-TIMES ?? Ahead of Tropical Storm Beta, a police officer sets up barricades on a flooded road Sunday in Corpus Christi, Texas.
COURTNEY SACCO/CORPUS CHRISTI CALLER-TIMES Ahead of Tropical Storm Beta, a police officer sets up barricades on a flooded road Sunday in Corpus Christi, Texas.

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