The Oklahoman

Gulf Coast braces for impact as Alberto approaches

- BY TAMARA LUSH AND REBECCA SANTANA

Beaches in Florida were largely empty ahead of Memorial Day as a slowly intensifyi­ng storm carrying brisk winds and heavy rain approached the U.S. Gulf Coast on Sunday.

The storm disrupted plans from Pensacola in the 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 due to high surf and dangerous conditions.

Subtropica­l Storm Alberto - the first named storm of the 2018 hurricane season that starts June 1 - prompted Florida, Alabama and Mississipp­i to launch emergency preparatio­ns Saturday. 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.

In Miami, organizers called off the sea portion of the Miami Beach Air & Sea Show Sunday because of heavy rain and rough waters. And in the Tampa Bay area on the central Gulf Coast, cities offered sandbags for homeowners worried about floods.

Live video from webcams posted in Clearwater and Destin showed half-empty beaches, and whitecaps roiled the normally placid Gulf waters.

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

The hurricane center said Sunday that a tropical storm warning was in effect from Bonita Beach, Florida, to the Mississipp­i-Alabama border.

In Gulf Shores, Alabama, webcams showed beaches beginning to fill up as the storm’s track shifted slightly east away from the region, but red flags on the beach warned beachgoers to stay out of the rough water.

Grant Brown, the city’s public informatio­n officer, said they had already finished a number of preparatio­ns such as clearing culverts to prepare for big rains but Sunday had turned into a “really nice day.”

With conditions expected to worsen overnight officials are encouragin­g people planning to check-out Monday to give themselves extra time.

 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? Travis Lee loads filled sand bags onto a truck bed Saturday in Gulfport, Miss, while preparing for Subtropica­l Storm Alberto to make landfall.
[AP PHOTO] Travis Lee loads filled sand bags onto a truck bed Saturday in Gulfport, Miss, while preparing for Subtropica­l Storm Alberto to make landfall.

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