The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Cristobal expected to be strong tropical storm hitting Louisiana

System could cause heavy rains from Texas to Florida.

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MIAMI — A reenergize­d Tropical Storm Cristobal advanced toward the U.S. Gulf Coast on Saturday, bringing with it the heavy rains that already caused flooding and mudslides in Mexico and Central America.

After weakening to a tropical depression while moving over land on Mexico’s Gulf Coast, Cristobal headed back into the southern Gulf of Mexico from the Yucatan Peninsula on Friday and powered back up into a tropical storm. Forecaster­s said it would arrive on U.S. soil late today but was not expected to grow into a hurricane.

The National Hurricane Center in Miami said in its 7 a.m. advisory Saturday that the storm was expected to slowly strengthen until it makes landfall, expected tonight along the U.S. Gulf Coast.

Cristobal’s maximum sustained winds had strengthen­ed to 50 mph by early Saturday, and it was moving north at 12 mph. The storm was centered about 365 miles south of the mouth of the Mississipp­i River.

The Hurricane Center said the storm could cause heavy rains from east Texas to Florida this weekend and into early this week. A tropical storm watch was posted for the northern Gulf of Mexico coast from Intracoast­al City, Louisiana, to the Alabama-Florida border.

In Louisiana, Gov. John Bel Edwards has declared a state of emergency to prepare for the storm’s possible arrival.

“Now is the time to make your plans, which should include the traditiona­l emergency items along with masks and hand sanitizer as we continue to battle the coronaviru­s pandemic,” Edward said in a statement released Thursday.

Cristobal formed last week in the Bay of Campeche from the remnants of Tropical Storm Amanda, which had sprung up last weekend in the eastern Pacific and hit Central America. The two storms combined to soak the region with as much as 35 inches of rain in some areas over the past week. At least 30 deaths have been attributed to the two storms and the flooding and landslides they unleashed.

In Bacalar, in the south of Mexico’s Quintana Roo state, 230 families were isolated by the rains and had to be airlifted out, David Leon, Mexico’s national civil defense coordinato­r, said Friday. Leon added there had been light damage in 75 municipali­ties in seven states.

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 ?? MAX BECHERER / THE TIMES-PICAYUNE / THE NEW ORLEANS ADVOCATE ?? A SE Louisiana Flood Protection Authority East crew closes the Bayou Road flood gate in St. Bernard Parish on Saturday ahead of Tropical Storm Cristobal.
MAX BECHERER / THE TIMES-PICAYUNE / THE NEW ORLEANS ADVOCATE A SE Louisiana Flood Protection Authority East crew closes the Bayou Road flood gate in St. Bernard Parish on Saturday ahead of Tropical Storm Cristobal.
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