USA TODAY International Edition

Gulf braces for double hurricane hit

Marco, Laura unlike anything coast has seen

- John Bacon and Greg Hilburn

MONROE, La. – Tropical Storm Marco grew to hurricane strength Sunday, one of two powerful storms marching toward the Gulf Coast and threatenin­g a historic double slam of landfalls within miles of each other.

Hurricane Marco is likely to make landfall in Louisiana late Monday. Tropical Storm Laura is expected to reach hurricane status before it roars into the state Wednesday. National

Weather Service Meteorolog­ist Benjamin Schott said such a confluence of storms hasn’t happened in the Gulf of Mexico in recorded history.

Isolated areas could see 15 inches of rain from the two storms, he said.

“We have a very unique situation with two storms that unfortunat­ely are headed to Louisiana,” Gov. John Bel Edwards said Sunday. “They pose a challenge we have quite frankly not seen before.”

Edwards said the “one- two punch” of hurricanes will blanket the state’s coastline with storm surge as high as 10 feet in some areas and prompt flash

flooding in others. He said residents should be ready to shelter in place for at least 72 hours, warning that it may not be possible to deploy helicopter­s and high- water vehicles after Marco’s storm surge if Laura comes in right behind.

Because of the COVID- 19 threat, Edwards said, the state plans to activate large shelters with congregate settings only “as a last resort.” Instead, the governor said, he’s working with the federal government to use hotels and motels if large evacuation­s become necessary.

On Grand Isle, south of New Orleans, Starfish Restaurant manager Nicole Fantiny watched a long line of people driving off the barrier island. “They are all packing up and leaving. My house was built in 1938, so I think we’re good.”

Hurricane Marco was about 395 miles southeast of Lafayette, Louisiana, powering maximum sustained winds of 75 mph as it slid to the north- northwest at 13 mph as of 5 p. m. Marco continued on a track for landfall in Louisiana on Monday, when it will blast parts of Louisiana, Mississipp­i and Alabama with storm surge, rainfall and strong winds.

The storm is expected to hook westward and possibly reach Texas as a tropical depression Tuesday.

Tropical Storm Laura battered the northern Caribbean on Sunday. Puerto Rico Gov. Wanda Vázquez declared a state of emergency, and Federal Emergency Management Agency Administra­tor Pete Gaynor said his teams were “on the ground and ready to support.” Downpours and gusty winds drenched the island, and nearly 6 inches of rain fell in some areas.

Laura was forecast to sweep over the Gulf late Monday into Tuesday.

“Environmen­tal conditions will be more favorable for strengthen­ing, and Laura is expected to become a hurricane prior to reaching the Gulf Coast,” Accuweathe­r Senior Meteorolog­ist Rob Miller warned. Landfall could come Wednesday.

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

Cay Wiser of Ocean Springs, Mississipp­i, lost her home to a Category 4 hurricane in 2005. She said she’s not overly concerned about Hurricane Marco, which is expected to make landfall as a Category 1, but she’s preparing.

“I’ve got food, I’ve got cases of water, my generator is working, I think I’ve got everything,” she said. “I don’t get nervous until it’s a high ( Category) 2. If they were talking about a high 2 or a 3, I’d think about leaving my house.”

The storms could keep on coming as tropical waves emerge off the coast of Africa, according to Accuweathe­r Meteorolog­ist Bernie Rayno. The heart of the 2020 hurricane season, which is just getting underway, is expected to be extremely active, he said.

The Atlantic season already has been a record- breaker. Laura is the earliest Lnamed storm in the Atlantic Basin. This season has had 13 named storms.

 ?? JOE RAEDLE/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Marris Mielnick covers windows in the French Quarter of New Orleans before the storms.
JOE RAEDLE/ GETTY IMAGES Marris Mielnick covers windows in the French Quarter of New Orleans before the storms.
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 ?? GERALD HERBERT/ AP ?? People line up at Costco to buy provisions in New Orleans on Sunday before Hurricane Marco, expected to make landfall Monday.
GERALD HERBERT/ AP People line up at Costco to buy provisions in New Orleans on Sunday before Hurricane Marco, expected to make landfall Monday.

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