USA TODAY International Edition

Gordon nears hurricane strength off Gulf Coast

Some parts of South could get up to a foot of rain

- Doyle Rice and John Bacon Contributi­ng: Jorge L. Ortiz, USA TODAY; Greg Hilburn, Monroe (Louisiana) News Star; WWLTV.com

Schools were closed and states of emergency were declared as the Gulf Coast braced for the heavy rains, high winds and storm surge of Tropical Storm Gordon, forecast to make landfall as a hurricane late Tuesday evening in Louisiana, Mississipp­i or Alabama.

As of late afternoon Tuesday, Gordon’s winds had strengthen­ed to 70 mph, 4 mph short of hurricane status.

“Please make your final preparatio­ns today in advance of #Gordon making landfall tonight,” Mississipp­i Gov. Phil Bryant tweeted.

Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards also declared a state of emergency, saying hundreds of National Guard members would be deployed in coastal areas. Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey issued a similar declaratio­n.

“All coastal Alabama residents need to prepare now ahead of tonight’s potential landfall,” she tweeted. “Our state will be ready for whatever Gordon may bring.”

The governors of Florida and Texas were monitoring developmen­ts.

The National Hurricane Center called the storm “life-threatenin­g” and warned that tornadoes were possible in Mississipp­i, Alabama and the Florida Panhandle.

The hurricane warning stretched from the Pearl River that separates Mississipp­i and Louisiana to the Alabama-Florida border.

The Mississipp­i Emergency Management Agency set up locations for residents to pick up sandbags.

In Biloxi, Mary Smith stocked up on supplies. “Cold drinks, bread and, you know, canned foods,” Smith said, listing her purchases.

Gordon is expected to dump 4 to 8 inches of rain over the western Florida Panhandle, southwest Alabama, southern and central Mississipp­i, eastern Louisiana and southern Arkansas, the National Weather Service said. Isolated maximum amounts of 12 inches could pound the area through late Thursday, and flash flooding is expected for much of the region.

The storm was centered 90 miles south of Mobile, Alabama, and was moving to the northwest at 15 mph.

 ??  ?? People fill sandbags Tuesday at Long Beach Harbor in Long Beach, Miss., in advance of Tropical Storm Gordon, which is continuing to strengthen and was expected to become a hurricane late Tuesday. AMANDA MCCOY/THE SUN HERALD VIA AP
People fill sandbags Tuesday at Long Beach Harbor in Long Beach, Miss., in advance of Tropical Storm Gordon, which is continuing to strengthen and was expected to become a hurricane late Tuesday. AMANDA MCCOY/THE SUN HERALD VIA AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States