Dayton Daily News

S. Texas prepares for Tropical Storm Hanna amid pandemic

- By Juan A. Lozano

Officials in South Texas, which has been hard hit by the coronaviru­s pandemic in recent weeks, said they’re also prepared to handle any challenges from Tropical Storm Hanna, which was headed their way and expected to make landfall this weekend.

“And don’t feel like since we’ve been fighting COVID for five months that we’re out of energy or we’re out of gas. We’re not. We can do these two things together and we’re going to win both of them. And so, we’ll get through this,” said Corpus Christi Mayor Joe McComb.

Corpus Christi is in

Nueces County, one of several COVID-19 hot spots in Texas. Officials in Nueces County said this week that 60 infants tested positive for the virus from July 1 to July 16.

In Cameron County, which borders Mexico, more than 300 confirmed new cases have been reported almost daily for the past two weeks, according to state health figures. The past week has also been the county’s deadliest of the pandemic and County Judge Eddie Treviño, the county’s top elected official, said he was awaiting word Friday of whether hotels would be used to house recovering COVID19 patients in order to free up hospital beds.

“If there’s any benefit to be gained from this, it’s that people have to stay at home for a weekend,” added Treviño, who has expressed concern in recent weeks over residents not wearing masks and partying together.

Hanna was about 230 miles east of Corpus Christi, according to the 1 p.m. CDT advisory from the National Hurricane Center. It had maximum sustained winds around 50 mph and was expected to make landfall along the Texas coast, likely somewhere between Corpus Christi and Brownsvill­e today.

The main hazard from Hanna was expected to be flash flooding, said Chris Birchfield, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service in Brownsvill­e. Areas of South Texas could see anywhere from 3 to 8 inches of rain, with some parts possibly seeing up to 12 inches. But the storm could also have wind gusts up to 65 mph.

“We could be dealing with significan­t flash flooding across much of deep South Texas,” Birchfield said.

Nueces County Judge Barbara Canales said she understand­s that the tropical storm would exacerbate already difficult times the county, which has about 362,000 residents, has been experienci­ng during the pandemic.

“You might be asking yourself at home, ‘How could this be possible that we’re living inside this unbelievab­le COVID-19 crisis here in Nueces County’ ... and then you think here comes a tropical storm ... But I ask you to think about being brave at being patient,” Canales said Friday.

 ?? AP ?? Employees with the city load sandbags into people’s cars as Tropical Storm Hanna approaches Friday in Corpus Christi, Texas. Tropical Storm Hanna formed in the Gulf of Mexico on Thursday.
AP Employees with the city load sandbags into people’s cars as Tropical Storm Hanna approaches Friday in Corpus Christi, Texas. Tropical Storm Hanna formed in the Gulf of Mexico on Thursday.

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