Texarkana Gazette

Nicholas set for landfall in Texas

- JUAN A. LOZANO Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Jill Bleed and Seth Borenstein of The Associated Press.

HOUSTON — Tropical Storm Nicholas gathered strength Monday and threatened to blow ashore in Texas as a hurricane that could bring up to 20 inches of rain to parts of the Gulf Coast, including the same area hit by Hurricane Harvey in 2017 and storm-battered Louisiana.

Nearly all of the state’s coastline was under a tropical storm warning that included potential flash floods and urban flooding. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said authoritie­s placed rescue teams and resources in the Houston area and along the coast.

Forecaster­s at the National Hurricane Center in Miami said the system’s top sustained winds reached 60 mph. If the winds hit 74 mph, the storm would become a Category 1 hurricane. It was moving north at 12 mph on a track to pass near the South Texas coast later in the day, then move onshore in the evening.

In flood-prone Houston, officials worried that heavy rain expected to arrive late Monday and early today could inundate streets and flood homes.

Authoritie­s deployed high-water rescue vehicles throughout the city and erected barricades at more than 40 locations that tend to flood, Mayor Sylvester Turner said.

“This city is very resilient. We know what we need to do. We know about preparing,” said Turner, referencin­g four major flood events that have hit the Houston area in recent years, including devastatin­g damage from Harvey.

Several schools in the Houston and Galveston areas were closed Monday because of the incoming storm. Covid-19 testing and vaccinatio­n sites were closed in Harris County, which includes Houston; Fort Bend County, southwest of Houston; and Nueces County, which includes Corpus Christi.

Monday afternoon, Nicholas was centered roughly 70 miles southeast of Port Aransas, Texas, and 105 miles south of Port O’Connor, Texas. It was “moving erraticall­y” just offshore, the hurricane center said.

A hurricane watch was issued from Port Aransas to San Luis Pass.

Eight to 16 inches of rain were expected along the middle and upper Texas coast, with isolated maximum amounts of 20 inches possible. Other parts of southeast Texas and southwest Louisiana could see 5 to 10 inches over the coming days.

Nicholas was headed toward the same area of Texas that was hit hard by Harvey. That storm made landfall in the middle Texas coast then stalled for four days, dropping more than 60 inches of rain in parts of southeast Texas. Harvey was blamed for at least 68 deaths, including 36 in the Houston area.

But University of Miami hurricane researcher Brian McNoldy said he expects that Nicholas “will be magnitudes less than Harvey in every regard.”

The worry with Nicholas will be how slowly it moves. Storms are moving slower in recent decades, and Nicholasco­uld get stuck between two other weather systems, said hurricane researcher Jim Kossin of The Climate Service.

Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards declared a state of emergency Sunday night, ahead of the storm’s arrival in a state still recovering from Hurricane Ida and last year’s Hurricane Laura and historic flooding.

“The most severe threat to Louisiana is in the southwest portion of the state, where recovery from Hurricane Laura and the May flooding is ongoing,” Edwards said.

The storm was expected to bring the heaviest rainfall west of where Ida slammed into Louisiana two weeks ago.

Across Louisiana, almost 120,000 customers remained

without power Monday morning, according to the utility tracking site poweroutag­e.us.

Colorado State University hurricane researcher Phil Klotzbach said via Twitter that Nicholas is the 14th named storm of the 2021 Atlantic hurricane season.

Only four other years since 1966 have had 14 or more named storms by Sept. 12: 2005, 2011, 2012 and 2020.

 ?? (AP/Houston Chronicle/Jason Fochtman) ?? Paul Villagomez loads filled gas containers into his truck on Monday as he prepares for Tropical Storm Nicholas in Kingwood, Texas. “I’m just trying to be prepared,” Villagomez said. “I’m actually surprised there aren’t more people filling up.”
(AP/Houston Chronicle/Jason Fochtman) Paul Villagomez loads filled gas containers into his truck on Monday as he prepares for Tropical Storm Nicholas in Kingwood, Texas. “I’m just trying to be prepared,” Villagomez said. “I’m actually surprised there aren’t more people filling up.”

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