The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

2 tropical storms threaten Gulf Coast

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SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Two tropical storms advanced across the Caribbean on Saturday as potentiall­y historic threats to the U.S. Gulf Coast, one dumping rain on Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands while the other was pushing through the gap between Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula and Cuba.

Tropical Storms Laura and Marco were both projected to approach Louisiana at or close to hurricane force just two days apart next week.

Two hurricanes have never appeared in the Gulf of Mexico at the same time, according to records going back to at least 1900, said Colorado State University hurricane researcher Phil Klotzbach. The last time two tropical storms were in the Gulf together was in 1959, he said.

The last time two storms made landfall in the United States within 24 hours of each other was in 1933, Klotzbach said.

The projected tracks from the U.S. National Hurricane Center on Saturday afternoon pointed to both storms being together in the Gulf on Monday, with Marco hitting Louisiana and Laura making landfall in the same general area Wednesday. But large uncertaint­ies remain for that time span, and forecasts have varied greatly so far for the two storms.

“We are in unpreceden­ted times,” Mississipp­i Gov. Tate Reeves said at a news conference Saturday as he declared a state of emergency. “We are dealing with not only two potential storms in the next few hours, we are also dealing with COVID-19.”

He urged residents to prepare for the storms and, if possible, find places to evacuate that are not public shelters.

A hurricane watch was issued for Intracoast­al City, Louisiana, eastward to the Mississipp­i-Alabama border.

Laura flung rain across Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands on Saturday and was expected to drench the Dominican Republic, Haiti and parts of Cuba through Sunday on its westward course.

Puerto Rico Gov. Wanda Vazquez declared a state of emergency and warned that flooding could be worse than what Tropical Storm Isaias unleashed three weeks ago because the ground is now saturated. The storm knocked down trees in the island’s southern region, and left more than 200,000 clients without power and more than 10,000 without water across the U.S. territory.

“No one should be out on the streets,” she said.

The storm was centered about 125 miles kilometers eastsouthe­ast of Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, late Saturday afternoon, with maximum sustained winds of 50 mph. It was moving west at 18 mph.

Officials said they were most concerned about the thousands of people in Puerto Rico who still have been living under blue tarps since 2017’s Hurricane

Maria and the hundreds of families living along the island’s southern coast in homes damaged by a string of strong earthquake­s this year.

As the storm approached Hispaniola, crews in the Dominican Republic began evacuating dozens of families in flood-prone areas.

Marco, meanwhile, was strengthen­ing while centered about 50 miles west of Cuba’s western tip, headed to the north-northwest at 13 mph. It had maximum sustained winds of 65 mph and was expected to become a hurricane later Saturday.

The National Hurricane Center said it expected the storms to stay far enough apart to prevent direct interactio­n as the region braces for the peak of the Atlantic hurricane season, which is forecast to be unusually active.

Both storms were expected to bring 3 to 6 inches of rain to areas they were passing over or near, threatenin­g widespread flooding across a vast region.

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