The Mercury News

Alberto leaves flooding, downed trees

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BIRMINGHAM, ALA. >> The soggy remnants of Alberto moved toward the nation’s interior Tuesday, leaving scattered flooding and downed trees in the wake of the year’s first named tropical storm.

More than 25,000 power outages were reported in Alabama, many caused by trees rooted in soggy soil falling across utility lines.

But while forecaster­s said the subtropica­l depression could dump as much as 6 inches of rain inland, few major problems were reported.

“We’ve had a lot of rain, but we got lucky. It was a constant rain but not a heavy rain,” said Regina Myers, emergency management director in Walker County.

Subtropica­l storm Alberto rolled ashore Monday afternoon in the Florida Panhandle and then weakened overnight to a depression. Beachcombe­rs had returned to the white sands of the Northern Gulf by Tuesday morning, but forecaster­s still warned of dangerous currents. In Cuba, flooding damaged an oil refinery and caused crude oil to spill into Cienfuegos Bay as the remnants of Alberto continued to drench the island.

State-owned TV showed authoritie­s using barriers Tuesday to try to contain the spill from the Cienfuegos refinery in central Cuba about 150 miles southeast of Havana. U.S. forecaster­s said rain could still cause dangerous flash floods in the coming days in northern Alabama and in areas of Georgia, Tennessee and the Carolinas.

In North Carolina, a television news anchor and a photojourn­alist were killed Monday when a tree became uprooted from rain-soaked ground and toppled onto their SUV, authoritie­s said.

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