Houston Chronicle

Names that ‘don’t bear repeating’: Harvey, Irma, Maria and Nate

Destructiv­e hurricanes’ monikers are retired from rotating roster

- By Alan Blinder

Good riddance, Harvey, Irma, Maria and Nate.

They were the monsters of the hurricane season from hell. Now, their names — already cursed, loathed and spray-painted on hastily bought plywood — are being banished.

An internatio­nal committee of meteorolog­ists has officially retired the names of the four 2017 storms from the rotating roster of cyclone names. They do that, the World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on says, when the committee judges that “a storm is so deadly or costly that the future use of its name on a different storm would be inappropri­ate for reasons of sensitivit­y.”

Four scratches from a single season is a lot, but it is not really a surprise, considerin­g how nasty the storms were.

Harvey dumped up to 5 feet of rain along and near the Texas coast, flooding much of Houston and scores of other communitie­s. Irma smashed through the Caribbean and then whacked Florida. Maria devastated Dominica, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Nate wreaked widespread destructio­n in Central America.

Together they killed at least 340 people, directly or indirectly — and the true toll is almost certainly much higher. To update its count, Puerto Rico is conducting a review of every death on the island since Maria made landfall there.

So you can see why the National Hurricane Center said Thursday that the names “don’t bear repeating.”

Only one other storm season has produced more banishment­s: 2005, the year of Dennis, Rita, Stan, Wilma and especially Katrina.

The current storm-naming system that covers the Atlantic basin dates from 1979, when the authoritie­s drew up six alphabetic­al lists of men’s and women’s names to be used in rotation. A similar system is used in the Pacific. Why name storms at all? “The main purpose,” the group says, “is basically for people easily to understand and remember” them.

Harvey, Irma, Maria and Nate have already been replaced in the six-year rotating roster. Come 2023, their spots will be filled by Harold, Idalia, Margot and Nigel.

First up this year: Aletta.

 ?? New York Times file ?? Hurricane Irma was one of four storms in the 2017 season — alongside Harvey, Maria and Nate — whose destructio­n merited retiring their names from the rotating roster meteorolog­ists use to designate storms.
New York Times file Hurricane Irma was one of four storms in the 2017 season — alongside Harvey, Maria and Nate — whose destructio­n merited retiring their names from the rotating roster meteorolog­ists use to designate storms.

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