Current:Home > InvestAmid fears of storm surge and flooding, Hurricane Francine takes aim at Louisiana coast -ChatGPT
Amid fears of storm surge and flooding, Hurricane Francine takes aim at Louisiana coast
View
Date:2025-04-19 15:01:43
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — Hurricane Francine barreled early Wednesday toward Louisiana and is expected to make landfall in coming hours as forecasters raised threats of potentially deadly storm surge, widespread flooding and destructive winds on the northern U.S. Gulf coast.
Francine drew fuel from exceedingly warm Gulf of Mexico waters to jump from a tropical storm to a Category 1 hurricane on Tuesday night. The National Hurricane Center said Francine might even reach Category 2 strength with winds of 96 to 110 mph (155 to 175 kph) before crashing into a fragile coastal region that still hasn’t fully recovered from a series of devastating hurricanes since 2020.
Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry warned at midday Tuesday — when Francine was still a tropical storm — that residents around south Louisiana and in the heavily populated state capital of Baton Rouge and nearby New Orleans — should “batten down all the hatches” and finish last preparations before a 24-hour window to do so closed.
Once Francine makes landfall, Landry said, residents should stay in place rather than venture out into waterlogged roads and risk blocking first responders or utility crews working to repair power lines.
The governor said the Louisiana National Guard is being deployed to parishes that could be impacted by Francine. They are equipped with food, water, nearly 400 high-water vehicles, about 100 boats and 50 helicopters to respond to the storm, including possible search-and-rescue operations.
Francine was centered Tuesday evening about 295 miles (475 kilometers) southwest of Morgan City, Louisiana, and was moving northeast at 10 mph (17 kph), the Miami-based hurricane center said.
A hurricane warning was in effect along the Louisiana coast from Cameron eastward to Grand Isle, about 50 miles (80 kilometers) south of New Orleans, according to the center. A storm surge warning stretched from the Mississippi-Alabama border to the Alabama-Florida border Such a warning means there’s a chance of life-threatening flooding.
In downtown New Orleans, cars and trucks were lined up for blocks on Tuesday to collect sandbags from the parking lot of a local YMCA. CEO Erika Mann said Tuesday that 1,000 bags of sand had already been distributed by volunteers later in the day to people hoping to protect homes from possible flooding.
One resident picking up sandbags was Wayne Grant, 33, who moved to New Orleans last year and was nervous for his first potential hurricane in the city. The low-lying rental apartment he shares with his partner had already flooded out in a storm the year before and he was not taking any chances this time around.
“It was like a kick in the face, we’ve been trying to stay up on the weather ever since,” Grant said. “We’re super invested in the place, even though it’s not ours.”
Francine is the sixth named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season. There’s a danger of life-threatening storm surge as well as damaging hurricane-force winds, said Brad Reinhart, a senior hurricane specialist at the hurricane center.
There’s also the potential for 4 to 8 inches (10 to 20 centimeters) of rain with the possibility of 12 inches (30 centimeters) locally across much of Louisiana and Mississippi through Friday morning, Reinhart said.
The hurricane center said parts of Mississippi, Alabama and the Florida Panhandle were at risk of “considerable” flash and urban flooding starting Wednesday, followed by a threat of possible flooding later in the week into the lower Mississippi Valley and lower Tennessee Valley as the soggy remnants of Francine sweep inland.
Francine is taking aim at a Louisiana coastline that has yet to fully recover since hurricanes Laura and Delta decimated Lake Charles in 2020, followed a year later by Hurricane Ida.
A little over three years after Ida trashed his home in the Dulac community of coastal Louisiana’s Terrebonne Parish – and about a month after he finished rebuilding – Coy Verdin was preparing for another hurricane.
“We had to gut the whole house,” he recalled in a telephone interview, rattling off a memorized inventory of the work, including a new roof and new windows.
Verdin, 55, strongly considered moving farther inland, away from the home where he makes his living on nearby Bayou Grand Caillou. After rebuilding, he said he’s there to stay.
“As long as I can. It’s getting rough, though,” he said.
Francine’s storm surge on the Louisiana coast could reach as much as 10 feet (3 meters) from Cameron to Port Fourchon and into Vermilion Bay, forecasters said. They said landfall was likely somewhere between Sabine Pass — on the Texas-Louisiana line — and Morgan City, Louisiana, about 220 miles (350 kilometers) to the east.
___
Associated Press writers Curt Anderson in St. Petersburg, Florida, Kevin McGill and Jack Brook in New Orleans contributed to this story.
veryGood! (27451)
Related
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- Calvin Harris, Martin Garrix, Tiësto to return to Miami for Ultra Music Festival 2024
- Mikaela Shiffrin still has more to accomplish after record-breaking season
- Coyotes' Travis Dermott took stand that led NHL to reverse Pride Tape ban. Here's why.
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- Israel strikes outskirts of Gaza City during second ground raid in as many days
- 1 of 4 men who escaped from a central Georgia jail has been caught, authorities say
- Best Buy recalls almost 1 million pressure cookers after spewed contents burn 17 people
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Billboard Music Awards 2023 Finalists: See the Complete List
Ranking
- 'Kraven the Hunter' spoilers! Let's dig into that twisty ending, supervillain reveal
- DC pandas will be returning to China in mid-November, weeks earlier than expected
- Maryland Supreme Court posthumously admits Black man to bar, 166 years after rejecting him
- Gulf oil lease sale postponed by court amid litigation over endangered whale protections
- Sam Taylor
- Prescription for disaster: America's broken pharmacy system in revolt over burnout and errors
- Kris Jenner calls affair during Robert Kardashian marriage 'my life's biggest regret'
- With map redrawn favoring GOP, North Carolina Democratic US Rep. Jackson to run for attorney general
Recommendation
What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
AP PHOTOS: Pan American Games bring together Olympic hopefuls from 41 nations
Driver in Malibu crash that killed 4 Pepperdine students pleads not guilty to murder
What to know about Maine's gun laws after Lewiston mass shooting
What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
What are Maine's gun laws?
Abortion restrictions in Russia spark outrage as the country takes a conservative turn
'Diaries of War' traces two personal accounts — one from Ukraine, one from Russia