Houston Chronicle

Florida Panhandle prepares for Alberto

- By Tamara Lush and Rebecca Santana

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Beaches in Florida were largely empty ahead of Memorial Day as the first named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season, Subtropica­l Storm Alberto, approached the northern Gulf Coast carrying brisk winds and heavy rain.

The storm disrupted long holiday weekend plans from Pensacola in the Florida Panhandle to Miami Beach on Florida’s southeaste­rn edge. Lifeguards posted red flags along the white sands of Pensacola Beach, where swimming and wading were banned amid high surf and dangerous conditions.

It also triggered mandatory evacuation­s of some small, sparsely populated Gulf Coast barrier islands in one Florida county. The Florida Division of Emergency Management said in a statement Sunday that a mandatory evacuation has been issued in Franklin County for all barrier islands there and those in the county living directly on the coast in mobile homes or in recreation vehicle parks.

Alberto got an early jump on the 2018 hurricane season, which doesn’t officially start until June 1. The storm prompted Florida, Alabama and Mississipp­i to launch emergency preparatio­ns over the weekend amid expectatio­ns Alberto would reach land sometime Monday. Rough conditions were expected to roil the seas off the eastern and northern Gulf Coast region through Tuesday.

“These swells are likely to cause life-threatenin­g surf and rip current conditions,” the National Hurricane Center in Miami said in a statement.

Gusty showers were to begin lashing parts of Florida on Sunday, and authoritie­s were warning of the possibilit­y of flash flooding.

Forecaster­s say Alberto was centered about 195 miles west of Tampa, Fla., Sunday night. It is moving to the northwest at 10 mph. Forecaster­s said Alberto has most recently taken a northnorth­west track that would bring it over the northern Gulf of Mexico during the night and make landfall on or in the vicinity of the Panhandle on Monday.

A subtropica­l storm like Alberto has a less defined and cooler center than a tropical storm, and its strongest winds are found farther from its center. Subtropica­l storms can develop into tropical storms, which in turn can strengthen into hurricanes. Forecaster­s cautioned that heavy rain and tropical storm conditions could reach the northern Gulf Coast well ahead of the center of Alberto making landfall.

Meanwhile, the National Hurricane Center in Miami discontinu­ed all storm surge warnings for most of the state’s peninsula.

Mark Bowen, the Bay County Emergency Management director, said at a Sunday afternoon news conference that the concern isn’t with storm surge due to the timing of landfall and the tides. He said Alberto’s biggest threat will be its heavy rains, with forecasts of anywhere from 4 to 12 inches of rain in some areas.

In Taylor County, there were voluntary evacuation­s for those in coastal zones and beach communitie­s, mobile homes, RV parks and low-lying areas. In Gulf County, T. H. Stone Memorial St. Joseph Peninsula State Park began evacuation­s Sunday morning.

A tropical storm warning was in effect from Bonita Beach, Fla., to the Mississipp­i-Alabama border.

 ?? Source: National Hurricane Center ?? Houston Chronicle
Source: National Hurricane Center Houston Chronicle

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