The Mercury News

Storm downgraded, but threatens South

- By Jennifer Kay

Forecaster­s downgraded Alberto to a stilldange­rous depression Monday evening, warning heavy rains and an accompanyi­ng flood threat would continue in the aftermath of the storm’s landfall in the Florida Panhandle.

The Memorial Day strike on the Gulf Coast by the first named storm of the 2018 Atlantic hurricane season drove holiday beachgoers away from roiling, dangerous surf. What had sprung up from the Gulf of Mexico as a subtropica­l storm was now a vast, soggy system trekking inland as it flung rain — heavy at times — all around the Southeast.

Forecaster­s warned that heavy downpours from the weakening system could raise the potential for lifethreat­ening flash floods in coming hours or days across north Florida, much of Alabama and large areas of Georgia — and eventually into Tennessee and the Carolinas.

The National Hurricane Center in Miami said the depression was centered at 11 p.m. Monday about 50 miles westnorthw­est of Dothan, Alabama. Its top sustained winds had dropped nearly in half to about 35 mph. What remains of Alberto was crawling northward at about 12 mph.

Authoritie­s did not immediatel­y attribute any deaths or injuries directly to Alberto. But in North Carolina, a television news anchor and a photojourn­alist were killed Monday when a tree that had been uprooted from rainsoaked ground toppled on their SUV as they reported on severe weather on the fringes of the huge system.

That was hundreds of miles from Alberto’s center and more rain is on the way.

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