The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Rain, road flooding as Cristobal draws closer

- By Gerald Herbert

NEW ORLEANS » Rain pounded the U.S. Gulf Coast on Sunday ahead of the arrival of Tropical Storm Cristobal, which has already spawned a tornado in Florida and threatened more twisters along with high winds and storm surge.

Roads flooded in coastal Louisiana and Mississipp­i, and thousands were without power even before the storm made landfall. It was expected to arrive on U.S. soil late Sunday, though it was not expected to grow into a hurricane.

Forecaster­s warned the storm would affect a wide area stretching roughly 180 miles east into Florida. But they forecast the worst impacts in southeast Louisiana and southern Mississipp­i, where some spots could get up to 12 inches of rain and storm surges of up to 5 feet.

“It’s very efficient, very tropical rainfall,” National Hurricane Center Director Ken Graham said in a Facebook video. “It rains a whole bunch real quick.”

The storm could also generate tornadoes in parts of Alabama, Louisiana, Mississipp­i and Florida.

Rain fell intermitte­ntly in New Orleans famed French Quarter on Sunday afternoon, but the streets were nearly deserted, with many businesses already boarded up due to the coronaviru­s.

Daniel Priestman shopped for groceries but said he didn’t see people franticall­y stocking up as he did before other storms. He said people may be “overwhelme­d” by the coronaviru­s and recent police violence and protests.

They seemed “resigned to whatever happens — happens,” he said.

 ?? MAX BECHERER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Crews from the Southeast Louisiana Flood Protection Authority East close the Bayou Road flood gate in St. Bernard Parish, La., ahead of Tropical Storm Cristobal.
MAX BECHERER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Crews from the Southeast Louisiana Flood Protection Authority East close the Bayou Road flood gate in St. Bernard Parish, La., ahead of Tropical Storm Cristobal.

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