The Gulf Coast states, still suffering the after-effects of the 2017 hurricane season, are being warned to prepare for heavy rainfall and powerful winds as tropical storm Gordon bears down on the Florida Keys.
The National Hurricane Center (NHC) issued a Tropical Storm watch for the northern Gulf Coast Sunday – from the Alabama-Florida border as far as Morgan City, Louisiana. Last year’s hurricane season battered the southern US states and Puerto Rico, killing thousands and causing hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of damage.
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As much as eight inches (20cm) of rain is expected to fall overnight and Potential Tropical Cyclone Seven is expected to increase in strength, first becoming a Tropical Depression and later a tropical storm on Monday night. The storm is moving at a speed of 15mph with maximum sustained winds of approximately 30mph and stronger gusts.
An Air Force Reserve reconnaissance aircraft will be deployed Monday evening to investigate how the system is developing and whether it does indeed evolve into a tropical storm. Should this occur it will be renamed Tropical Storm Gordon, reports the Weather Channel.
In an online statement, Florida Governor Rick Scott advised citizens to stay vigilant and be prepared.
Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards followed suit, activating the state’s Crisis Action Team and advising citizens to prepare their disaster plans and have all the necessary medications and supplies they need. For Louisiana residents, the shadow of Hurricane Katrina still looms large.
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