New York Post

Double whammy

La., Texas brace for historic storms

- By JACKIE SALO Additional reporting by Kate Sheehy, with Wires

The Gulf Coast was bracing Sunday for a potentiall­y devastatin­g, historic hit of back-toback hurricanes — with Louisiana and Texas set to bear the brunt of the monster storms.

“There has never been anything we’ve seen like this before, where you can have possibly two hurricanes hitting within miles of each over a 48-hour period,” Benjamin Schott, chief meteorolog­ist at the National Weather Service’s office in Slidell, La., told reporters Sunday.

Louisiana, which declared a state of emergency last week in anticipati­on of the weather hell, is set to be battered first Monday evening by Marco, a former tropical storm that whipped itself into hurricane status with 75 mph winds Sunday afternoon.

But it’s not necessaril­y the winds that are at issue, forecaster­s said. It’s the rain Marco is expected to bring — at least 10 inches, plus storm surges of 4 to 6 feet, some of which could hit northern Texas, too.

Then there’s the very real threat of Tropical Storm Laura turning into an even stronger hurricane and making landfall in western Louisiana and along the Texas coast by Wednesday — leaving the area unable to catch its breath before getting pummeled again, forecaster­s said.

“What we know is there’s going to be storm surge from Marco, we know that that water is not going to recede hardly at all before Laura hits, and so we’ve not seen this before, and that’s why people need to be paying particular attention,” Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards said at a press conference Sunday.

New Orleans is particular­ly vulnerable given its location in the storms’ paths, experts said — and they are concerned its levy system may not stand up to Mother Nature’s wrath a la Hurricane Katrina. That ’cane made landfall Aug. 29, 2005, and cost 1,800 lives and $160 billion in damages, the most of any natural disaster in US history.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott declared 23 counties as disaster areas Sunday.

“It is incredibly important for anybody who could be in the path of these storms to constantly heed local warnings about what could happen in your community,” Abbott said at a press conference Sunday. “Understand this is very swift-moving and there could be rising water very quickly.”

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