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Tag: Flooding

  • Flood advisories issued for Alameda, Contra Costa, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz counties

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    A flood advisory was issued Monday evening for central and eastern Contra Costa and eastern and western Alameda counties, as well as parts of Santa Cruz and Santa Clara counties, according to the National Weather Service. 

    The advisory for western Alameda and central Contra Costa counties has been extended through 9:30 p.m. Eastern and Southern Santa Clara County has been issued a flood advisory, including Morgan Hill and Gilroy, until 10 p.m. A flood advisory for western Santa Cruz County will go until 9:15 p.m., NWS said. 

    Minor road and low-lying area flooding is expected, according to the NWS.

    Showers began arriving in the North Bay on Monday morning and have brought scattered rain across the rest of the region, with chances of thunderstorms and gusty winds.

    The early season storm is expected to bring substantial rain to the Bay Area and Central Coast, with 0.25-1.5 inches in the lower elevations and up to 3 inches in higher elevations, according to the National Weather Service.

    By noon, showers began appearing in the North Bay, with the main rain band remaining off the coast of Sonoma County.

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    Bay City News

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  • Coastal storm brings strong winds, flooding to New Jersey shore

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    ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (WPVI) — A coastal storm churned its way up the East Coast on Sunday, with New Jersey declaring a state of emergency and some airports posting delays and cancellations in advance of anticipated coastal flooding, and strong winds, as another storm system struck farther south with heavy rain.

    All of New Jersey has been under a state of emergency since Saturday night. It’s expected to last into Monday, authorizing the state’s emergency services personnel to be activated as necessary.

    A coastal flooding warning remains in effect until 8 p.m. Monday, the Atlantic County Office of Emergency Management said on Sunday.

    Widespread roadway flooding is expected in coastal and bayside communities.

    Motorists traveling in and out of Atlantic City are advised to use the Atlantic City Expressway, as both the White Horse Pike and Black Horse Pike may become flooded.

    The Atlantic County OEM is also reminding drivers not to drive through flood waters, as water is often deeper than realized and can cause vehicle damage and drivers to become stranded.

    Residents who live in flood prone areas are advised to move their vehicles to higher ground prior to high tide Sunday afternoon. Free parking is being made available at the Wave Parking Garage in Atlantic City at 2200 Fairmount Avenue.

    A high wind warning is also in effect from 11 a.m. Sunday through 6 a.m. Monday.

    Northeast winds of 30-40 mph with wind gusts of up to 60 mph are expected. This may cause downed trees and power lines, making for difficult travel.

    Atlantic City Electric is currently reporting a small number of power outages, with that number expected to increase throughout the day as the storm makes its way through the area.

    Residents are encouraged to report flooded roadways and non-life threatening emergencies to local emergency management offices.

    Residents may also sign up to receive emergency alerts from the county’s emergency notification system.

    Copyright © 2025 WPVI-TV. All Rights Reserved.

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    6abc Digital Staff

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  • Warning issued for life-threatening flash flooding in Arizona

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    Meteorologists warned of “life-threatening flash flooding” in southeastern and southcentral Arizona on Sunday in an advisory issued by the National Weather Service (NWS).

    Thunderstorms in the area of Pinal and Maricopa counties have already produced heavy rain, at least an inch to an inch-and-a-half, creating flash flooding in the region, the alert said.

    More rain is expected in the area due to remnants of Tropical Storm Priscilla, forecasters warned.

    According to the NWS, even a brief storm can lead to life-threatening situations, “flooding of creeks and streams, normally dry washes, urban areas, highways, streets, and underpasses.”

    Why It Matters

    Flash floods are among the deadliest weather hazards in the United States, claiming dozens of lives annually, particularly in arid regions where dry ground cannot quickly absorb sudden, intense rainfall.

    The warning underscores the increased risk facing communities in Arizona and surrounding states as climate patterns drive more severe and frequent storms. Flash flooding is especially dangerous in Arizona due to the prevalence of dry washes, creeks, and urban infrastructure that can overwhelm drainage systems with little warning.

    So far this year, the U.S. has recorded a notable number of flash flooding fatalities across multiple states including Texas, Illinois and New Jersey, drawing renewed attention to the dangers associated with rapidly rising waters.

    What To Know

    NWS meteorologists issued a life-threatening flash flood warning as Priscilla, previously a Category 2 hurricane, shifted into a post-tropical system but still carried excessive moisture northward into Arizona.

    As reported by the National Hurricane Center (NHC), the storm at its peak had sustained winds of 110 miles per hour, though by Friday, it had diminished to winds of 45 mph as it traveled off the coast of Baja California.

    Throughout Arizona, NWS offices implemented flood watches and warnings as meteorologists tracked rain bands moving into central parts of the state.

    Animated weather radar indicated thunderstorms and torrential rain impacting areas near Phoenix and extending into northern and eastern Arizona. Rainfall totals were expected to reach 3 to 4 inches in central Arizona, with local amounts up to 6 inches possible—a significant trigger for flash flooding.

    Flood and weather watches were activated in neighboring states as well, including Utah, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, as well as parts of California.

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    The NWS Weather Prediction Center noted, “Greatest rainfall amounts are expected across south-central AZ, especially N [north] and E [east] of PHX,” while lighter rain would spread through a wider area.

    NWS Phoenix advised residents to avoid driving through flooded areas and to stay alert as rainfall increases, saying, “Be aware of your surroundings and do not drive on flooded roads.”

    “Most flood deaths occur in vehicles,” the agency warned.

    What People Are Saying

    The National Weather Service said in an advisory Sunday: “At 1050 AM MST, the public reported thunderstorms producing heavy rain across the warned area. Between 1 and 1.5 inches of rain have fallen. Flash flooding is already occurring. HAZARD…Life threatening flash flooding. Thunderstorms producing flash flooding…Life threatening flash flooding of creeks and streams, urban areas, highways, streets and underpasses.”

    Arizona Department of Transportation wrote on X Sunday: “Westbound Loop 202 Santan is now closed at Cooper. Pumps are working, but the storm cell that just passed over the SE Valley dropped a bunch of rain here. Our hydrovac crews are responding help catch up and open lanes.”

    What Happens Next

    The immediate flash flood warning in Arizona is set to expire at 1:45 p.m. Mountain Standard Time, but flood watches and alerts will persist through Sunday as rain bands from Priscilla continue to impact the region.

    Residents are advised to remain alert to rapidly changing weather conditions and to follow safety guidance from local emergency officials.

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  • Live radar: Track incoming nor’easter

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    A nor’easter churned its way up the East Coast on Sunday, with New Jersey declaring a state of emergency and some airports posting delays and cancellations in advance of anticipated coastal flooding, and strong winds, as another storm system struck farther south with heavy rain and flooding.

    Parts of the state are forecast to experience moderate to major coastal flooding, inland flash flooding, winds up to 60 mph, up to 5 inches of rain and high surf, potentially causing beach erosion. Some volunteers were putting sandbags at beaches.

    Track the system using our live radar above and get the latest forecast details from Storm Team 4 right here.

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    NBC New York Staff and The Associated Press

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  • Life-threatening flash floods hit Arizona: Live tracker maps

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    Meteorologists with the National Weather Service (NWS) have issued a life-threatening flash flood warning for parts of Arizona as remnants of Tropical Storm Priscilla brings excessive moisture to the state.

    Newsweek has reached out to the National Hurricane Center (NHC) by email for comment.

    Why It Matters

    Priscilla was the 16th named storm of the 2025 Eastern Pacific hurricane season. As of a recent update from the NHC, Priscilla had maximum wind speeds of 45 miles per hour, making it a tropical storm, though earlier it was classified as an upper-level Category 2 hurricane, with winds of 110 mph.

    The storm is expected to soon weaken into a post-tropical depression. Despite its weakening power, heavy rain associated with the storm has already stretched as far north as the Desert Southwest.

    What to Know

    NWS offices across the Desert Southwest have issued flood watches in advance of the heavy rain, which is expected to impact parts of California, Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Arizona, and New Mexico through this weekend.

    Although Priscilla has not made landfall and is currently churning off the coast of Baja California, rain bands associated with the storm are already moving into the U.S.

    Priscilla Weather Radar

    Animated weather footage from windy.com shows thunderstorms and heavy rain associated with the storm are now impacting southeastern California and much of Arizona, with the strongest storms in central Arizona.

    Rain Accumulation

    Over the next three days, windy.com shows the worst of the rain will hit Central Arizona near Phoenix, with around 3 to 4 inches possible.

    “Chances for heavy rainfall will increase over the next couple of days, leading to increasing flooding concerns across the area. Greatest rainfall amounts are expected across south-central AZ, especially N and E of PHX,” the NWS office in Phoenix posted on X on Friday. “A Flood Watch is in effect for most areas through Sat.”

    A rainfall forecast from the NWS Weather Prediction Center showed a small portion of north-central Arizona and part of southwestern Colorado could receive rainfall amounts between 4 and 6 inches.

    Lesser amounts of 1 to 2 inches will be much more widespread across Arizona, Utah, and Colorado.

    Thunderstorms

    As of Friday afternoon, the worst of the thunderstorms were clustered near Las Vegas.

    “Tropical moisture brings rainfall chances to most of the area today and tonight,” NWS Las Vegas posted on X. “Precipitation chances decrease and gusty winds increase tomorrow as the system exits.”

    Weather Alerts

    Much of Arizona, Utah, and Colorado faced moderate weather alerts, as well as parts of Southern California and Northwestern New Mexico.

    Most NWS alerts in place were flood related.

    What People Are Saying

    NHC in a public advisory about Priscilla: “As Priscilla moves off the west coast of Baja California, up to an inch of rain is expected across the Baja California peninsula. For the southwestern United States, 2 to 4 inches of rain, with local storm total maxima to 6 inches, are expected across portions of central and northern Arizona, southern Utah, and southwest Colorado through Saturday. Flash flooding is likely in portions of central Arizona and southwest Utah, with scattered areas of flash flooding expected across the remainder of Arizona, southern Utah, southwest Colorado, and far northwest New Mexico.”

    NWS Flagstaff in a flash flood warning currently in place: “Life threatening flash flooding of creeks and streams, normally dry washes, urban areas, highways, streets and underpasses.”

    What Happens Next?

    The flash flood warning will expire at 1:45 p.m. Mountain Standard Time. However, other alerts related to the storm, such as flood watches, will remain in place through Saturday evening.

    NWS and NHC meteorologists will continue issuing updates about the storm as it progresses.

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  • Thunderstorms, muggy weather ahead for Southern California thanks to Hurricane Priscilla

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    Southern California could see some unseasonable rain and thunderstorms this week thanks to a hurricane moving north along the Mexican coast, according to the National Weather Service.

    From Thursday to Saturday, the region’s mountains, foothills and deserts could, again, see significant rainfall — this time because of Hurricane Priscilla, the National Weather Service warned. Last month, a similar pattern that pulled moisture north from Tropical Storm Mario triggered dangerous mudslides in the San Bernardino County mountains and flooding in the Inland Empire that killed one child.

    However, local forecasts don’t yet expect rainfall will be as dramatic this week. Widespread flood alerts were issued for Southern California as Mario moved north; that hasn’t yet occurred this week.

    But there is a chance that much of the Southland sees some precipitation, though the most concerning rainfall is expected further east into Arizona, Utah and Colorado. There, weather service officials have issued a hazardous weather outlook, warning of the potential for flash flooding, particularly in parts of Colorado and Utah.

    In Southern California, it’s the San Bernardino, Riverside and San Diego county mountains that have the highest chance to see heavy rainfall, mostly from thunderstorms that could develop over the area, said Sebastian Westerink, a National Weather Service meteorologist in San Diego. Depending on the strength of the storms, certain areas could get 1 to 2 inches of rainfall, he said, and there could be some flash flooding.

    “It’s really going to hit or miss in the mountains,” Westerink said. The rest of Southern California, especially urban, coastal areas, will notice a shift in weather, but rainfall will be minimal, he said. Temperatures are expected to rise slightly across the region by Friday, but not too dramatically.

    “It will mainly be cloudy region-wide; it will mainly be muggier,” Westerink said. “We’re forecasting generally less than a tenth of an inch of rain for the coastal basin.”

    South and east Los Angeles County are mostly likely to see rainfall, according to forecasts. Most of that moisture will move out of the Southland by the weekend, but some areas could still catch rain Saturday, Westerink said.

    “Definitely by Sunday we should be done,” he said.

    But further east, heavy rains could continue through Tuesday, though the strongest storms are forecast Thursday through Saturday, according to the weather service.

    Parts of Arizona, Utah, Colorado and New Mexico are preparing for the potential for flash floods beginning Thursday, with 2 to 4 inches of rain likely, and up to 6 inches possible, according to the National Hurricane Center.

    On Wednesday morning, Hurricane Priscilla was about 200 miles off the southern tip of Baja California, clocking winds around 75 mph, according to the latest update from the hurricane center. The storm is forecast to continue weakening over the next two days. Still, a tropical storm watch remained in effect for Baja California Sur, where effects from the storm were expected to begin Wednesday.

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    Grace Toohey

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  • Pinellas County installs new tidal gauge sensors

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    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Pinellas County environmental management has installed 11 new tidal gauge sensors around the peninsula over the summer, which will provide real-time data for flood-prone areas during king tides and storm surge.


    What You Need To Know

    • Pinellas County Environmental Management has installed 11 new tidal gauge sensors, bringing the total to 13
    • Pinellas Public Works contracted with Hohonu to provide the sensors, data and maps
    • The real-time data from the ultrasonic sensors is available to the public
    • The county will use the water level gauges to better communicate the threat of flooding


    “So, having that real localized data is really important to us,” said Rob Burnes, environmental management project manager. “Especially when you’re talking about a matter of inches and feet for flooding roads and flooding structures.”

    Burnes said the county realized after last year’s back-to-back hurricanes that it had a blind spot in some areas. At that time, the county was relying on two tidal gauge sensors. The only one for west Pinellas was a NOAA sensor located at Clearwater Beach.

    “So we really focused on trying to get some stations on the west side that would give us that information,” he said. “As well as we knew we had some trouble points within the county that we wanted to get better ideas of what was going on flooding wise.” 

    Pinellas Public Works contracted with Hohonu to install 11 tidal gauge sensors, which encircle the county from Weedon Island to Fort DeSoto to Boca Ciega and Tarpon Springs, bringing the total to 13 sensors. Each sensor costs $3,000 per year to operate, according to Burnes.

    “What we’re trying to do is really just get an idea in these distinct parts around the county,” he said. “So we have a good idea of what’s going on real time with the flooding conditions.”

    The real-time data from the ultrasonic sensors is available to the public, which can be very helpful for residents living in flood-prone areas.

    “You can see this data,” said Burnes. “You can see all the sites we have with the county.”

    The county will use the water level gauges to better understand and communicate the threat of flooding in real-time.

    “So, being able to have this data, being able to have this data quickly and in real time, it’s huge,” Burnes said. “Again, it lets us get out, gets a message to emergency management, gets the message to our operations people, and then gets the message out to the public, ‘Hey, you might need to pay attention to what’s going on here.’”

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    Josh Rojas

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  • At least 170 U.S. hospitals face major flood risk. Experts say Trump is making it worse.

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    LOUISVILLE, Tenn. — When a big storm hits, Peninsula Hospital could be underwater.

    At this decades-old psychiatric hospital on the edge of the Tennessee River, an intense storm could submerge the building in 11 feet of water, cutting off all roads around the facility, according to a sophisticated computer simulation of flood risk.

    Aurora, a young woman who was committed to Peninsula as a teenager, said the hospital sits so close to the river that it felt like a moat keeping her and dozens of other patients inside. KFF Health News agreed not to publish her full name because she shared private medical history.

    “My first feeling is doom,” Aurora said as she watched the simulation of the river rising around the hospital. “These are probably some of the most vulnerable people.”

    Covenant Health, which runs Peninsula Hospital, said in a statement it has a “proactive and thorough approach to emergency planning” but declined to provide details or answer questions.

    Peninsula is one of about 170 American hospitals, totaling nearly 30,000 patient beds from coast to coast, that face the greatest risk of significant or dangerous flooding, according to a months-long KFF Health News investigation based on data provided by Fathom, a company considered a leader in flood simulation. At many of these hospitals, flooding from heavy storms has the potential to jeopardize patient care, block access to emergency rooms, and force evacuations. Sometimes there is no other hospital nearby.

    Much of this risk to hospitals is not captured by flood maps issued by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which have served as the nation’s de facto tool for flood estimation for half a century, despite being incomplete and sometimes decades out of date. As FEMA’s maps have become divorced from the reality of a changing climate, private companies like Fathom have filled the gap with simulations of future floods. But many of their predictions are behind a paywall, leaving the public mostly reliant on free, significantly limited government maps.

    “This is highly concerning,” said Caleb Dresser, who studies climate change and is both an emergency room doctor and a Harvard University assistant professor. “If you don’t have the information to know you’re at risk, then how can you triage that problem?”

    The deadliest hospital flooding in modern American history occurred 20 years ago during Hurricane Katrina, when the bodies of 45 people were recovered from New Orleans’ Memorial Medical Center, including some patients whom investigators suspected were euthanized. More flooding deaths were narrowly avoided one year ago when helicopters rescued dozens of people as Hurricane Helene engulfed Unicoi County Hospital in Erwin, Tennessee.

    Rebecca Harrison, a paramedic, called her children from the Unicoi roof to say goodbye.

    “I was scared to death, thinking, ‘This is it,’” Harrison told CBS News, which interviewed Unicoi survivors as part of KFF Health News’ investigation. “Alarms were going off. People were screaming. It was chaos.”

    The investigation — among the first to analyze nationwide hospital flood risk in an era of warming climate and worsening storms — comes as the administration of President Donald Trump has slashed federal agencies that forecast and respond to extreme weather and also dismantled FEMA programs designed to protect hospitals and other important buildings from floods.

    When asked to comment, FEMA said flooding is a common, costly, and “under appreciated” disaster but made no statement specific to hospitals. Spokesperson Daniel Llargués defended the administration’s changes to FEMA by reissuing an August statement that dismissed criticism as coming from “bureaucrats who presided over decades of inefficiency.”

    Alice Hill, an Obama administration climate risk expert, said the Trump administration’s dismissal of climate change and worsening floods would waste billions of dollars and endanger lives.

    In 2015, Hill led the creation of the Federal Flood Risk Management Standard, which required that hospitals and other essential structures be elevated or incorporate extra flood protections to qualify for federal funding.

    FEMA stopped enforcing the standard in March.

    “People will die as a result of some of the choices being made today,” Hill said. “We will be less prepared than we are now. And we already were, in my estimation, poorly prepared.”

    “Flood risk is everywhere”

    The KFF Health News investigation identified more than 170 hospitals facing a flood risk by comparing the locations of more than 7,000 facilities to peer-reviewed flood hazard mapping provided by Fathom, a United Kingdom company that simulates flooding in spaces as small as 10 meters using laser-precision elevation measurements from the U.S. Geological Survey.

    Hospitals were determined to have a significant risk if Fathom’s 100-year flood data predicted that a foot or more of water could reach a considerable portion of their buildings, excluding parking garages, or cut off road access to the hospital. A 100-year flood is an intense weather event that has roughly a 1% chance of occurring in any given year but can happen more often.

    The investigation found heightened flood risks at large trauma centers, small rural hospitals, children’s hospitals, and long-term care facilities that serve older and disabled patients. At least 21 are critical access hospitals, with the next-closest hospital 25 miles away, on average.

    Flooding threatens dozens of hospitals in coastal areas, including in Florida, Louisiana, Texas, and New York. Farther inland, flooding of rivers or creeks could envelop other hospitals, particularly in Appalachia and the Midwest. Even in the sun-soaked cities and arid expanses of the American West, storms have the potential to surround some hospitals with several feet of pooling water, according to Fathom’s data.

    These findings are likely an undercount of hospitals at risk because the investigation overlooked pockets of potential flooding at some hospitals. It excluded facilities like stand-alone ERs, outpatient clinics, and nursing homes.

    “The reality is that flood risk is everywhere. It is the most pervasive of perils,” said Oliver Wing, the chief scientific officer at Fathom, who reviewed the findings. “Just because you haven’t experienced an extreme doesn’t mean you never will.”

    Dresser, the ER doctor, said even a small amount of flooding can shut down an unprepared hospital, often by interrupting its power supply, which is needed for life-sustaining equipment like ventilators and heart monitors. He said the most vulnerable hospitals would likely be in rural areas.

    “A lot of rural hospitals are now closing their pediatric units, closing their psychiatry units,” Dresser said. “In a financially stressed situation, it can be hard to prioritize long-term threats, even if they are, for some institutions, potentially existential.”

    Urban hospitals can face dangerous flooding, too. Fathom’s data predicts 5 to 15 feet of water around neighboring hospitals — Kadlec Regional Medical Center and Lourdes Behavioral Health — that straddle a tiny creek in Richland, Washington.

    By Fathom’s estimate, a 100-year flood could cause the nearby Columbia River to spill over a levee that protects Richland, then loosely follow the creek to the hospitals. Some of the deepest flooding is estimated around Lourdes, which was built on land the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers set aside in 1961 as a “ponding and drainage easement.”

    At the time, this land was supposed to be capable of storing enough water to fill at least 40 Olympic-size swimming pools, according to military documents obtained through the Freedom of Information Act. A mental health facility has occupied this spot since the 1970s.

    Both Kadlec and Lourdes said in statements that they have disaster plans but did not answer questions about flooding. Tina Baumgardner, a Lourdes spokesperson, said government flood maps show the hospital is not in a 100-year flood plain.

    This is not uncommon. Of the more than 170 hospitals with significant flood risk identified by KFF Health News, one-third are located in areas that FEMA has not designated as flood hazard zones.

    Sometimes the difference is stark. For example, at Ochsner Choctaw General in Alabama — the only hospital for 30 miles in any direction — FEMA maps suggest a 100-year flood would overflow a nearby creek but spare the hospital. Fathom’s data predicts the same event would flood most of the hospital with 1 to 2 feet of water, including the ER and the helicopter pad.

    Ochsner Health did not answer questions about flooding preparations at Choctaw General.

    FEMA flood maps were launched in the ’60s as part of the National Flood Insurance Program to determine where insurance is required and building codes should include flood-proofing. According to a FEMA statement, the maps show only a “snapshot in time” and are not intended to predict where flooding will or won’t happen.

     FEMA spokesperson Geoff Harbaugh said the agency intends to modernize its maps through the Future of Flood Risk Data initiative, which will enable the agency to “better project flood risk” and give Americans “the information they need to protect their lives and property.”

    The program was launched by the first Trump administration in 2019 but has since received sparse public updates. Harbaugh declined to provide a detailed update or timeline for the program.

    Chad Berginnis, executive director of the Association of State Floodplain Managers, said it is unknown whether FEMA is still trying to upgrade its maps under Mr. Trump, as the agency has cut off communications with outside flooding experts.

    “There has been not a single bit of loosening of what I’m calling the FEMA cone of silence,” Berginnis said. “I’ve never seen anything like it.”

    Floods are expected to worsen as a warming climate fuels stronger storms, drenching areas that are already flood-prone and bringing a new level of flooding to areas once considered lower risk.

    The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has said that 2024 was the warmest year on record — more than 2 degrees Fahrenheit higher than the 20th-century average. Scientists across the globe have estimated that each degree of global warming correlates to a 4% increase in the intensity of extreme rainfall.

    “Warmer air can hold more moisture, so this leads us to experience heavier downpours,” said Kelly Van Baalen, a sea level rise expert at the nonprofit Climate Central. “A 100-year flood today could be a 10-year flood tomorrow.”

    Intensifying storms raise concerns about Peninsula Hospital, which has operated for decades mere feet from the Tennessee River but has no known history of flooding.

    Peninsula spokesperson Josh Cox said the river is overseen by the Tennessee Valley Authority, which uses dams to manage water levels and generate electricity. Estimates provided by the TVA suggest the dams could keep Peninsula dry even in a 500-year flood.

    Fathom, however, said its flood simulation accounts for the dams and stressed that a large enough storm could drop more rain than even the TVA could control. These predictions are echoed by another flood modeling firm, First Street, which also says an intense storm could cause more than 10 feet of flooding in the area around Peninsula.

    “It’s a hospital right on the banks of a major American river,” said Wing, the Fathom scientist. “It just isn’t conceivable that such a location is risk-free.”

    Jack Goodwin, 75, a retired TVA employee who has lived next to Peninsula for three decades, said he was confident the dams could protect the area. But after reviewing Fathom’s predictions, Goodwin began to research flood insurance.

    “Water can rise quickly and suddenly, and the destruction is tremendous,” he said. “Just because we’ve never seen it here doesn’t mean we won’t see it.”

    “All the elements of a real disaster”

    One year ago, as Hurricane Helene carved a deadly path across Southern Appalachia, Angel Mitchell was visiting her ailing mother at Unicoi County Hospital in the tiny town of Erwin, Tennessee.

    Swollen by Helene, the nearby Nolichucky River spilled over its banks and around  the hospital, which was built in a flood plain. Staff tried to bar the doors, Mitchell said, but the water got  in, trapping her and others inside. The lights went out. People fled to the roof, where the roar of rushing water nearly drowned out the approach of rescue helicopters, Mitchell said.

    Angel Mitchell

    Angel Mitchell and her mother were rescued from catastrophic flooding at Unicoi County Hospital in Erwin, Tennessee, during Hurricane Helene in September 2024. 

    Chance Horner/CBS News


    Ultimately, 70 people, including Mitchell and her mother, were airlifted to safety on Sept. 27, 2024, narrowly escaping the hospital without a single death. The hospital remains closed, and the company that owns it, Ballad Health, has said its reopening is uncertain.

    “Why allow something — especially a hospital — to be built in an area like that?” Mitchell told CBS News. “People have to rely on these areas to get medical help, and they’re dangerous.”

    Beyond Unicoi, KFF Health News identified 39 inland hospitals — including 16 in Appalachia — that Fathom predicts could flood when nearby rivers, creeks, or drainage canals overspill their banks, even in storms far less intense than Helene.

    For example, in the Cumberland Mountains of southwestern Virginia, a 100-year flood is projected to cause Slate Creek to engulf Buchanan General Hospital in more than 5 feet of water.

    Near the Great Lakes in Erie, Pennsylvania, LECOM Medical Center and Behavioral Health Pavilion could become flooded by a small drainage creek that is less than 50 feet from the front door of the ER.

    Neither Buchanan nor LECOM responded to questions about flooding or preparations.

    And in West Virginia’s capital of Charleston, where about 50,000 people live at the junction of two rivers in a wide and flat valley, a single storm could potentially flood five of the city’s six hospitals at once, along with schools, churches, fire departments, and other facilities.

    “I hate to say it,” said Behrang Bidadian, a flood plain manager at the West Virginia GIS Technical Center, “but it has all the elements of a real disaster.”

    At the largest hospital in Charleston, CAMC Memorial Hospital, Fathom predicts that the Kanawha River could bring as much as 5 feet of flooding to the ER. Across town, the Elk River could surround CAMC Women and Children’s Hospital, cutting off all exits.

    And in the center of the city, where the overflowing rivers are predicted to merge, Thomas Orthopedic Hospital could be besieged by more than 10 feet of water on three sides.

    WVU Medicine, which owns Thomas Orthopedic Hospital, did not respond to requests for comment.

    CAMC spokesperson Dale Witte said the hospital system is aware of its flood risk and has prepared by elevating electrical infrastructure and acquiring flood-proofing equipment, like a deployable floodwall. CAMC also regularly revises and drills its disaster plans, Witte said, although he added that hospitals there have never been tested by a real flood.

    Shanen Wright, 48, a lifelong Charleston resident who lives near CAMC Memorial, said many in the city have little worry about flooding in the face of more immediate problems, like the opioid epidemic and the decline of manufacturing and mining.

    Tugboats and coal barges sail past his neighborhood as if they were cars on his street.

    “It’s not to say it’s not a possibility,” he said. “I’m sure the people in Asheville and the people in Texas, where the floods took so many lives, they probably didn’t see it coming either.”

    Shanen Wright of Charleston, West Virginia

    Shanen Wright has lived in Charleston, West Virginia, nearly five decades and says he has never seen the Kanawha River rise above its banks. Located at the junction of two rivers in a wide and flat valley, Charleston is at risk of a single storm potentially flooding the city’s five largest hospitals at once, according to flood data from the company Fathom. 

    Daniel Chang/KFF Health News


    “The water is coming”

    Despite wide scientific consensus that climate change fuels more dangerous weather, the Trump administration has taken the position that concerns about global warming are overblown. In a speech to the United Nations in September, Mr. Trump called climate change “the greatest con job ever perpetrated on the world.”

    The Trump administration has made deep staff and funding cuts to FEMA, NOAA, and the National Weather Service. At FEMA, the cuts prompted 191 current and former employees to publish a letter in August warning that the agency is being dismantled from within.

    Daniel Swain, a University of California climate scientist, said the administration’s rejection of climate change has left the nation less prepared for extreme weather, now and in the future.

    “It’s akin to enforcing malpractice scientifically,” Swain said. “Imagine making a medical decision where you are not allowed to look at 20% of the patient’s vital signs or test results.”

    Under Mr. Trump, FEMA has also taken actions critics say will leave the nation more vulnerable to flooding, specifically:

    • FEMA disbanded the Technical Mapping Advisory Council, which had repeatedly pushed the agency to modernize its flood maps to estimate future risk and account for the impacts of climate change.
    • FEMA canceled its Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities program, which provided grants to help communities and vital buildings, including hospitals, protect themselves from floods and other natural disasters.
    • And after stopping enforcement early this year, FEMA intends to rescind the Federal Flood Risk Management Standard, which was designed to harden buildings against future floods and save tax dollars in the long run.

    Berginnis, of the Association of State Floodplain Managers, said the administration’s unwillingness to prepare for climate change and worsening storms would result in a dangerous and costly cycle of flooding, rebuilding, and flooding again.

    “The president is saying we are closed for business when it comes to hazard mitigation,” Berginnis said. “It bugs me to no end that we have to have reminders — like people dying — to show us why it’s important to make these investments.”

    FEMA did not answer specific questions about these decisions. In the statement to KFF Health News, spokesperson Llargués touted the administration’s response to flooding in Texas and New Mexico and said FEMA had provided billions of dollars to help people and communities recover and rebuild. He did not mention any FEMA funding for protecting against future floods.

    Few hospitals understand this threat more than the former Coney Island Hospital in New York City, which has suffered catastrophic flooding before and has prepared for it to come again.

    Superstorm Sandy in 2012 forced the hospital to evacuate hundreds of patients. When the water receded, fish and a sea turtle were found in the building.

    Eleven years later, the facility reopened as Ruth Bader Ginsburg Hospital, transformed by a FEMA-funded $923 million reconstruction project that added a 4-foot floodwall and elevated patient care areas and utility infrastructure above the first floor.

    It is now likely one of the most flood-proofed hospitals in the nation.

    But, so far, no storm has tested the facility.

    Svetlana Lipyanskaya, CEO of NYC Health+Hospitals/South Brooklyn Health, which includes the rebuilt hospital, said the question of flooding is “not an if but a when.”

    “I hope it doesn’t happen in my lifetime,” she said, “but frankly, I’d be surprised. The water is coming.”

    CBS News correspondent David Schechter and photojournalist Chance Horner contributed to this report.

    KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF — the independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism.


    Methodology

    After Hurricane Helene made landfall a year ago, a raging river flooded a rural hospital in eastern Tennessee. Patients and employees were rescued from the rooftop. Floods have hit hospitals from New York to Nebraska to Texas in recent years. We wanted to determine how many other U.S. hospitals face similar peril. Ultimately, we found more than 170 hospitals at risk.

    For this analysis, we used data from Fathom, a United Kingdom-based company that specializes in flood-risk modeling across the globe. To assess the United States’ vulnerability, Fathom uses sophisticated computer simulations and detailed terrain data covering the country. It accounts for environmental factors such as climate change, soil conditions, and many rivers and creeks not mapped by other sources. Fathom’s modeling has been peer-reviewed and used by insurance companies, the World Bank, the Nature Conservancy, and government agencies in Florida, Texas, and elsewhere. The Iowa Flood Center has validated Fathom’s U.S. data.

    Through a data use agreement, Fathom shared its U.S. mapping data that predicts areas with at least a 1% chance of flooding in any given year. Fathom’s data estimates the effects of three main types of flooding: coastal, fluvial (from overflowing rivers, lakes, or streams), and pluvial (rainfall that the ground can’t absorb). The data also accounts for dams, reservoirs, and other structures that defend against floods.

    To identify at-risk hospitals, we used a publicly available Department of Homeland Security database containing the GPS coordinates of more than 7,000 short-term acute, critical access, rehab, and psychiatric hospitals — basically any hospital with inpatient services. (DHS under the Trump administration has discontinued public access to the database, so data for hospitals and other infrastructure is no longer widely available.)

    Using GPS coordinates as the centerpoint, we created a circle with a 150-yard radius around each hospital, which in most cases captured the building plus nearby grounds and access roads. We then mapped Fathom’s flood-risk data to see where it overlapped with these circles. We started by looking for hospitals where at least 20% of the circle’s area had a predicted flood depth of at least 1 foot. That gave us an initial list of more than 320 hospitals across the U.S.

    From there, we visually inspected those hospitals using mapping software and Google Maps, both satellite and street view. We trimmed our list to only the hospitals where a considerable portion of the building or all access roads were predicted to have at least a foot of flooding.

    If two hospitals were mapped to the same building — for instance, a small rehab facility within a large hospital — we counted only one hospital. We also excluded hospitals recently converted to nursing homes or for other uses.

    We ended up with a list of 171 hospitals across the U.S. That is most likely an undercount. Some hospitals could still face significant impact from flooding that is not deep enough or widespread enough to fit our methodology. Our analysis also does not account for how flooding farther from a hospital could affect employees or patients. And it does not assess what steps hospitals may have already taken to prepare for severe weather events.

    We also ran a spatial analysis comparing Fathom’s data with flood hazard maps from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which in many cases are incomplete or haven’t been updated in years. We found that about a third of hospitals identified as flood risks by Fathom’s data did not overlap at all with FEMA’s 100- or 500-year hazard areas.

    Fathom provided guidance and feedback as we developed our analysis.

    and

    contributed to this report.

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  • 2 killed in Cuba as Tropical Storm Imelda and Hurricane Humberto threaten Bahamas and Bermuda

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    Authorities in the Bahamas closed most schools on Monday as Tropical Storm Imelda dropped heavy rain in the northern Caribbean, including over Cuba, where two people died as a result of the storm.The storm was located about 120 miles north of Great Abaco Island of the Bahamas, which is still recovering from Hurricane Dorian after it slammed into parts of the Bahamas as a devastating Category 5 hurricane in 2019.Imelda had maximum sustained winds of 65 mph and was moving north at 9 mph. It was forecast to become a hurricane on Tuesday morning and spin out to open ocean, according to the National Hurricane Center in Miami.A tropical storm warning was in effect for parts of the extreme northwestern Bahamas, including Great Abaco, Grand Bahama Island, and the surrounding keys. Power outages were reported in some areas, with authorities closing government offices on affected islands and issuing mandatory evacuation orders for some islands over the weekend.2 deaths and evacuations across CubaCuban Prime Minister Manuel Marrero said late Monday that two people died after Imelda impacted eastern Cuba. On his X account, Marrero said the two people died in Santiago de Cuba province, but he didn’t give any details.Earlier, state media reported that 60-year-old Luis Mario Pérez Coiterio had died in Santiago de Cuba following landslides in that area.In Santiago de Cuba, flooding and landslides cut off 17 communities, according to the official newspaper Granma. More than 24,000 people live in those communities.In Guantánamo, another impacted province, more than 18,000 people have been evacuated, according to reports from the state-run Caribe television channel.Imelda was expected to drop 4 to 8 inches of rain across the northwest Bahamas through Tuesday, and 2 to 4 inches across eastern Cuba.Humberto roars in open watersMeanwhile, Hurricane Humberto, a Category 4 storm, churned in open waters nearby, which forecasters said would cause Imelda to abruptly turn to the east-northeast, away from the southeastern United States coast.“This is really what’s going to be saving the United States from really seeing catastrophic rainfall,” said Alex DaSilva, lead hurricane expert for AccuWeather, a private U.S. weather forecasting company.DaSilva said the two storms would draw closer and start rotating counterclockwise around each other in what’s known as the Fujiwhara effect.“It’s a very rare phenomenon overall in the Atlantic basin,” he said.Humberto had maximum sustained winds of 140 mph. It was located about 295 miles southwest of Bermuda, moving north-northwest at 13 mph. A hurricane watch was in effect for Bermuda.“This is going to be no threat to the United States,” DaSilva said.The Carolinas brace for Imelda’s rainsMoisture from Imelda was expected to move up the Carolinas, with heavy rain forecast through Tuesday morning. The heaviest rains will be limited to the coastline, from Charleston in South Carolina to Wilmington in North Carolina, while Charlotte and Raleigh might receive only 1 to 2 inches of rain, he said.The Carolinas might see wind gusts of 40 mph, but only along the coastline, DaSilva said, as he warned of dangerous surf and heavy rip currents all week.South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster said authorities were prepositioning search and rescue crews over the weekend.In North Carolina, Gov. Josh Stein declared a state of emergency even before Imelda formed, while authorities on Tybee Island off the coast of Georgia handed out free sandbags to residents.Even though Imelda was not making landfall in Florida, its impact was still felt.At the Loggerhead Marinelife Center in Juno Beach, crews found a couple of turtle hatchlings that rough surf had tossed ashore.“We actually had two washbacks come in over the weekend,” said Justin Perrault, the center’s vice president of research. “We may get more as the day goes along.”He said typically beachgoers will see a hatchling resting in the seaweed and call the center for help.Farther south in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, Carl Alexandre exercised at the beach on Monday. He said he was grateful the storm was not heading toward South Florida, but that he would pray for those in the Bahamas.“It’s great that we’re not having one as of right now,” Alexandre said. “And now we get to run in the Florida sun.”‘A double whammy for Bermuda’Authorities in Bermuda hoped neither of the two storms would be a direct hit later in the week, though they were forecast to, at least, come close, with Imelda possibly passing within 15 miles as the season’s soon-to-be fourth hurricane, Da Silva said.“It’s going to be a double whammy for Bermuda, Humberto first and Imelda following close behind,” Da Silva said.Michael Weeks, Bermuda’s national security minister, urged residents to prepare, warning that there have been “some near misses this season regarding severe storms.”“Hurricane Humberto is a dangerous storm, and with another system developing to our south, every household in Bermuda should take the necessary steps to be prepared,” he said.Flights to and from the islands in the Bahamas were canceled, with airports expected to reopen after weather conditions improve.

    Authorities in the Bahamas closed most schools on Monday as Tropical Storm Imelda dropped heavy rain in the northern Caribbean, including over Cuba, where two people died as a result of the storm.

    The storm was located about 120 miles north of Great Abaco Island of the Bahamas, which is still recovering from Hurricane Dorian after it slammed into parts of the Bahamas as a devastating Category 5 hurricane in 2019.

    Imelda had maximum sustained winds of 65 mph and was moving north at 9 mph. It was forecast to become a hurricane on Tuesday morning and spin out to open ocean, according to the National Hurricane Center in Miami.

    A tropical storm warning was in effect for parts of the extreme northwestern Bahamas, including Great Abaco, Grand Bahama Island, and the surrounding keys. Power outages were reported in some areas, with authorities closing government offices on affected islands and issuing mandatory evacuation orders for some islands over the weekend.

    2 deaths and evacuations across Cuba

    Cuban Prime Minister Manuel Marrero said late Monday that two people died after Imelda impacted eastern Cuba. On his X account, Marrero said the two people died in Santiago de Cuba province, but he didn’t give any details.

    Earlier, state media reported that 60-year-old Luis Mario Pérez Coiterio had died in Santiago de Cuba following landslides in that area.

    In Santiago de Cuba, flooding and landslides cut off 17 communities, according to the official newspaper Granma. More than 24,000 people live in those communities.

    In Guantánamo, another impacted province, more than 18,000 people have been evacuated, according to reports from the state-run Caribe television channel.

    Imelda was expected to drop 4 to 8 inches of rain across the northwest Bahamas through Tuesday, and 2 to 4 inches across eastern Cuba.

    Humberto roars in open waters

    Meanwhile, Hurricane Humberto, a Category 4 storm, churned in open waters nearby, which forecasters said would cause Imelda to abruptly turn to the east-northeast, away from the southeastern United States coast.

    “This is really what’s going to be saving the United States from really seeing catastrophic rainfall,” said Alex DaSilva, lead hurricane expert for AccuWeather, a private U.S. weather forecasting company.

    DaSilva said the two storms would draw closer and start rotating counterclockwise around each other in what’s known as the Fujiwhara effect.

    “It’s a very rare phenomenon overall in the Atlantic basin,” he said.

    Humberto had maximum sustained winds of 140 mph. It was located about 295 miles southwest of Bermuda, moving north-northwest at 13 mph. A hurricane watch was in effect for Bermuda.

    “This is going to be no threat to the United States,” DaSilva said.

    The Carolinas brace for Imelda’s rains

    Moisture from Imelda was expected to move up the Carolinas, with heavy rain forecast through Tuesday morning. The heaviest rains will be limited to the coastline, from Charleston in South Carolina to Wilmington in North Carolina, while Charlotte and Raleigh might receive only 1 to 2 inches of rain, he said.

    The Carolinas might see wind gusts of 40 mph, but only along the coastline, DaSilva said, as he warned of dangerous surf and heavy rip currents all week.

    South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster said authorities were prepositioning search and rescue crews over the weekend.

    In North Carolina, Gov. Josh Stein declared a state of emergency even before Imelda formed, while authorities on Tybee Island off the coast of Georgia handed out free sandbags to residents.

    Even though Imelda was not making landfall in Florida, its impact was still felt.

    At the Loggerhead Marinelife Center in Juno Beach, crews found a couple of turtle hatchlings that rough surf had tossed ashore.

    “We actually had two washbacks come in over the weekend,” said Justin Perrault, the center’s vice president of research. “We may get more as the day goes along.”

    He said typically beachgoers will see a hatchling resting in the seaweed and call the center for help.

    Farther south in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, Carl Alexandre exercised at the beach on Monday. He said he was grateful the storm was not heading toward South Florida, but that he would pray for those in the Bahamas.

    “It’s great that we’re not having one as of right now,” Alexandre said. “And now we get to run in the Florida sun.”

    ‘A double whammy for Bermuda’

    Authorities in Bermuda hoped neither of the two storms would be a direct hit later in the week, though they were forecast to, at least, come close, with Imelda possibly passing within 15 miles as the season’s soon-to-be fourth hurricane, Da Silva said.

    “It’s going to be a double whammy for Bermuda, Humberto first and Imelda following close behind,” Da Silva said.

    Michael Weeks, Bermuda’s national security minister, urged residents to prepare, warning that there have been “some near misses this season regarding severe storms.”

    “Hurricane Humberto is a dangerous storm, and with another system developing to our south, every household in Bermuda should take the necessary steps to be prepared,” he said.

    Flights to and from the islands in the Bahamas were canceled, with airports expected to reopen after weather conditions improve.

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  • 1 man killed in Cuba as Tropical Storm Imelda and Hurricane Humberto threaten Bahamas and Bermuda

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    Authorities in the Bahamas closed a majority of schools on Monday following mandatory evacuations for some islands in the archipelago as Tropical Storm Imelda was expected to drop heavy rain in the northern Caribbean, with landslides killing one man in Cuba.The storm was located about 35 miles north of Great Abaco Island, which is still recovering from Hurricane Dorian after it slammed into parts of the Bahamas as a devastating Category 5 hurricane in 2019.Imelda had maximum sustained winds of 60 mph and was moving north at 9 mph. It was forecast to become a hurricane on Tuesday and spin out to open ocean, according to the National Hurricane Center in Miami.A tropical storm warning was in effect for parts of the northwestern Bahamas, including Eleuthera, the Abacos, Grand Bahama Island and the surrounding keys. Power outages were reported in some areas, with authorities closing government offices on affected islands.A death and evacuations across CubaImelda was expected to drop 4 to 8 inches of rain across the northwest Bahamas through Tuesday, and 2 to 4 inches across eastern Cuba. State media in Cuba reported that 60-year-old Luis Mario Pérez Coiterio died in Santiago de Cuba following landslides in that area.“After two days of intense rains in the municipality of Santiago de Cuba, we are now in the stage of saving human lives and the economy of the entire city,” Mayor Indira Oliva Bueno said, according to a broadcast aired by the official Caribe channel.In the easternmost part of Cuba, from Camagüey to Guantánamo, authorities supplied food and drinking water to residents, according to official TV reports.Overall, Imelda forced the evacuation of some 1,291 people across Cuba, with 158 of them staying in shelters.“We are working with our agricultural colleagues to provide food to the population, which is essential,” said Alexander Olivares, president of the San Antonio del Sur Defense Council in Guantánamo.Humberto roars in open watersMeanwhile, Hurricane Humberto, a Category 4 storm, churned in open waters nearby, which forecasters said would cause Imelda to abruptly turn to the east-northeast, away from the southeastern United States coast.“This is really what’s going to be saving the United States from really seeing catastrophic rainfall,” said Alex DaSilva, lead hurricane expert for AccuWeather, a private U.S. weather forecasting company.When two storms circle near each other, they create what’s known as the Fujiwhara effect, which means that they start to rotate counterclockwise around each other, DaSilva said.“It’s a very rare phenomenon overall in the Atlantic basin,” he said.Humberto had maximum sustained winds of 145 mph. It was located about 340 miles south-southwest of Bermuda, moving northwest at 13 mph. A tropical storm watch was in effect for Bermuda.“This is going to be no threat to the United States,” DaSilva said.The Carolinas brace for Imelda’s rainsHowever, moisture from Imelda was expected to move up the Carolinas, with heavy rain forecast through Tuesday morning. The heaviest rains will be limited to the coastline, from Charleston in South Carolina to Wilmington in North Carolina, while Charlotte and Raleigh might receive only 1 to 2 inches of rain, he said.The Carolinas might see wind gusts of 40 mph, but only along the coastline, DaSilva said, as he warned of dangerous surf and heavy rip currents all week.South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster said authorities were prepositioning search and rescue crews over the weekend.In North Carolina, Gov. Josh Stein declared a state of emergency even before Imelda formed, while authorities on Tybee Island off the coast of Georgia handed out free sandbags to residents.Further south in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, Carl Alexandre exercised at the beach on Monday. He said he was grateful the storm was not heading toward South Florida, but that he would pray for those in the Bahamas.“It’s great that we’re not having one as of right now,” Alexandre said. “And now we get to run in the Florida sun.”Mick Varley, who was visiting Fort Lauderdale from London, said he’s delighted the storm will remain offshore.“I’m very happy it’s not going to disrupt our plans,” he said.‘A double whammy for Bermuda’As Tropical Storm Imelda and Hurricane Humberto swirled in open waters, authorities in Bermuda prepared for two near misses.“It’s going to be a double whammy for Bermuda, Humberto first and Imelda following close behind,” Da Silva said.He said Imelda could pass within 15 miles of Bermuda as the Atlantic season’s soon-to-be fourth named hurricane. Meanwhile, the center of Humberto is expected to pass west and then north of Bermuda on Tuesday and Wednesday, according to the National Hurricane Center.Michael Weeks, Bermuda’s national security minister, urged residents to prepare, warning that there have been “some near misses this season regarding severe storms.”“Hurricane Humberto is a dangerous storm, and with another system developing to our south, every household in Bermuda should take the necessary steps to be prepared,” he said.Flights to and from the islands in the Bahamas were canceled, with airports expected to reopen after weather conditions improve.

    Authorities in the Bahamas closed a majority of schools on Monday following mandatory evacuations for some islands in the archipelago as Tropical Storm Imelda was expected to drop heavy rain in the northern Caribbean, with landslides killing one man in Cuba.

    The storm was located about 35 miles north of Great Abaco Island, which is still recovering from Hurricane Dorian after it slammed into parts of the Bahamas as a devastating Category 5 hurricane in 2019.

    Imelda had maximum sustained winds of 60 mph and was moving north at 9 mph. It was forecast to become a hurricane on Tuesday and spin out to open ocean, according to the National Hurricane Center in Miami.

    A tropical storm warning was in effect for parts of the northwestern Bahamas, including Eleuthera, the Abacos, Grand Bahama Island and the surrounding keys. Power outages were reported in some areas, with authorities closing government offices on affected islands.

    A death and evacuations across Cuba

    Imelda was expected to drop 4 to 8 inches of rain across the northwest Bahamas through Tuesday, and 2 to 4 inches across eastern Cuba. State media in Cuba reported that 60-year-old Luis Mario Pérez Coiterio died in Santiago de Cuba following landslides in that area.

    “After two days of intense rains in the municipality of Santiago de Cuba, we are now in the stage of saving human lives and the economy of the entire city,” Mayor Indira Oliva Bueno said, according to a broadcast aired by the official Caribe channel.

    In the easternmost part of Cuba, from Camagüey to Guantánamo, authorities supplied food and drinking water to residents, according to official TV reports.

    Overall, Imelda forced the evacuation of some 1,291 people across Cuba, with 158 of them staying in shelters.

    “We are working with our agricultural colleagues to provide food to the population, which is essential,” said Alexander Olivares, president of the San Antonio del Sur Defense Council in Guantánamo.

    Humberto roars in open waters

    Meanwhile, Hurricane Humberto, a Category 4 storm, churned in open waters nearby, which forecasters said would cause Imelda to abruptly turn to the east-northeast, away from the southeastern United States coast.

    “This is really what’s going to be saving the United States from really seeing catastrophic rainfall,” said Alex DaSilva, lead hurricane expert for AccuWeather, a private U.S. weather forecasting company.

    When two storms circle near each other, they create what’s known as the Fujiwhara effect, which means that they start to rotate counterclockwise around each other, DaSilva said.

    “It’s a very rare phenomenon overall in the Atlantic basin,” he said.

    Humberto had maximum sustained winds of 145 mph. It was located about 340 miles south-southwest of Bermuda, moving northwest at 13 mph. A tropical storm watch was in effect for Bermuda.

    “This is going to be no threat to the United States,” DaSilva said.

    The Carolinas brace for Imelda’s rains

    However, moisture from Imelda was expected to move up the Carolinas, with heavy rain forecast through Tuesday morning. The heaviest rains will be limited to the coastline, from Charleston in South Carolina to Wilmington in North Carolina, while Charlotte and Raleigh might receive only 1 to 2 inches of rain, he said.

    The Carolinas might see wind gusts of 40 mph, but only along the coastline, DaSilva said, as he warned of dangerous surf and heavy rip currents all week.

    South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster said authorities were prepositioning search and rescue crews over the weekend.

    In North Carolina, Gov. Josh Stein declared a state of emergency even before Imelda formed, while authorities on Tybee Island off the coast of Georgia handed out free sandbags to residents.

    Further south in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, Carl Alexandre exercised at the beach on Monday. He said he was grateful the storm was not heading toward South Florida, but that he would pray for those in the Bahamas.

    “It’s great that we’re not having one as of right now,” Alexandre said. “And now we get to run in the Florida sun.”

    Mick Varley, who was visiting Fort Lauderdale from London, said he’s delighted the storm will remain offshore.

    “I’m very happy it’s not going to disrupt our plans,” he said.

    ‘A double whammy for Bermuda’

    As Tropical Storm Imelda and Hurricane Humberto swirled in open waters, authorities in Bermuda prepared for two near misses.

    “It’s going to be a double whammy for Bermuda, Humberto first and Imelda following close behind,” Da Silva said.

    He said Imelda could pass within 15 miles of Bermuda as the Atlantic season’s soon-to-be fourth named hurricane. Meanwhile, the center of Humberto is expected to pass west and then north of Bermuda on Tuesday and Wednesday, according to the National Hurricane Center.

    Michael Weeks, Bermuda’s national security minister, urged residents to prepare, warning that there have been “some near misses this season regarding severe storms.”

    “Hurricane Humberto is a dangerous storm, and with another system developing to our south, every household in Bermuda should take the necessary steps to be prepared,” he said.

    Flights to and from the islands in the Bahamas were canceled, with airports expected to reopen after weather conditions improve.

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  • Humberto intensifies to a major hurricane and is expected to get stronger, forecasters say

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    Humberto roared to a major Category 3 hurricane on Friday and was expected to gain even more strength over the next couple of days.The National Hurricane Center in Miami said Hurricane Humberto had maximum sustained winds of 115 mph. It was centered about 430 miles northeast of the northern Leeward Islands.Humberto could produce life-threatening surf and rip currents for the northern Leeward Islands, the Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico and Bermuda over the weekend, forecasters said. Meanwhile, the center of Gabrielle, now a post-tropical cyclone, moved away from the Azores, and the hurricane warning for the entire Portuguese archipelago was discontinued by the Azores Meteorological Service. On Friday afternoon, the storm was about 245 miles east-northeast of Lajes Air Base in the Azores.Maximum sustained winds were near 65 mph with higher gusts. One observatory reported sustained winds of 78 mph, which would be hurricane-level.Some strengthening was forecast through Friday night, with weakening expected over the weekend, and Gabrielle was expected to approach the Portugal’s coast by early Sunday. Swells expected to produce life-threatening surf and rip currents were expected to reach Portugal, northwestern Spain and northern Morocco on Saturday.In the Pacific Ocean, Hurricane Narda was churning about 880 miles west-southwest of the southern tip of Baja California and heading west-northwest at 15 mph. The Category 1 storm was expected to maintain its strength on Friday before weakening over the weekend.Swells generated by Narda were affecting southwestern and west central Mexico and Baja California Sur, forecasters said. The swells that could bring life-threatening surf and rip current conditions were expected to reach southern California over the weekend.

    Humberto roared to a major Category 3 hurricane on Friday and was expected to gain even more strength over the next couple of days.

    The National Hurricane Center in Miami said Hurricane Humberto had maximum sustained winds of 115 mph. It was centered about 430 miles northeast of the northern Leeward Islands.

    Humberto could produce life-threatening surf and rip currents for the northern Leeward Islands, the Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico and Bermuda over the weekend, forecasters said.

    Meanwhile, the center of Gabrielle, now a post-tropical cyclone, moved away from the Azores, and the hurricane warning for the entire Portuguese archipelago was discontinued by the Azores Meteorological Service. On Friday afternoon, the storm was about 245 miles east-northeast of Lajes Air Base in the Azores.

    Maximum sustained winds were near 65 mph with higher gusts. One observatory reported sustained winds of 78 mph, which would be hurricane-level.

    Some strengthening was forecast through Friday night, with weakening expected over the weekend, and Gabrielle was expected to approach the Portugal’s coast by early Sunday. Swells expected to produce life-threatening surf and rip currents were expected to reach Portugal, northwestern Spain and northern Morocco on Saturday.

    In the Pacific Ocean, Hurricane Narda was churning about 880 miles west-southwest of the southern tip of Baja California and heading west-northwest at 15 mph. The Category 1 storm was expected to maintain its strength on Friday before weakening over the weekend.

    Swells generated by Narda were affecting southwestern and west central Mexico and Baja California Sur, forecasters said. The swells that could bring life-threatening surf and rip current conditions were expected to reach southern California over the weekend.

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  • Camp Mystic plans to reopen in Texas next summer after flood that killed 27

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    Less than three months after the devastating and deadly flooding in the Texas Hill Country, Camp Mystic plans to reopen part of its camp.

    The camp’s owners announced plans to reopen the Cypress Lake location, which is separate from the part of the camp that flooded in July, killing 27 girls and counselors.

    In an email sent Monday to the families of the victims and obtained by the Associated Press, the camp said when it reopens, its planning and procedures will follow the “requirements of the camp safety legislation you bravely championed.” About an hour later, the camp sent an email to the rest of the families announcing the decision.  

    The email states, “We are not only rebuilding the cabins and trails, but also a place where laughter, friendship and spiritual growth will continue to flourish.”

    The camp also announced that it will build a memorial to the girls who died in the flooding.

    “In the memorial’s design, we will strive to capture the beauty, kindness and grace they all shared, while focusing on the joy they carried and will always inspire in us all,” the email said.

    The announcement means that Camp Mystic Cypress Lake, a sister site that opened to campers in 2020, will reopen next summer. But the 99-year-old Camp Mystic Guadalupe was too damaged to open next summer, according to the camp.

    The email said leaders are “working with engineers and other experts to determine how we will implement the changes required” under the newly passed bills.

    The campers and counselors were swept to their deaths when fast-rising floodwaters of the Guadalupe River roared through the girls’ summer camp in a low-lying area known as flash flood alley. All told, the destructive flooding in Texas on the Fourth of July killed at least 136 people and washed away homes and vehicles.

    Camp Mystic parents successfully pushed for Texas to pass bills aimed at preventing similar tragedies. The measures aim to improve the safety of children’s camps by prohibiting cabins in dangerous parts of flood zones and requiring camp operators to develop detailed emergency plans, to train workers and to install and maintain emergency warning systems. One allocates $240 million from the state’s rainy day fund for disaster relief, along with money for warning sirens and improved weather forecasting.

    “It will hurt my family forever that, for reasons I still do not know, these protections were not in place nor thought out thoroughly for my daughter and the rest of the girls here,” he said. “Please pass this bill, protect our kids and do not let their deaths be in vain.”

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  • St. Petersburg installs flood panels at NE sewer plant

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    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — The city of St. Petersburg has begun installing flood panels on buildings at the Northeast Water Reclamation Facility, which will help keep the sewer plant operating during hurricanes, according to Public Works Administrator Claude Tankersley.


    What You Need To Know

    • Public Works began installing flood panels on the filter station building last week 
    • A total of 11 buildings at the Northeast Water Reclamation Facility in St. Petersburg will have flood panels installed  
    • The city purchased 100 flood panels for the NE plant, which cost a little more than $1 million
    • Public Works also plans to protect its Southwest Water Reclamation Facility with flood panels 


    “This is a very big upgrade,” he said. “We are at the point now that if we were to receive a Helene storm, we would not have to shut down this plant.”

    The NE plant was taken offline last year for the first time during Hurricane Helene and then again with Milton. Since that time, St. Pete has been working to harden the plant by elevating some equipment and installing flood panels on low-lying buildings.

    “So these panels here will serve basically the same function as an Aquafence,” said Tankersley. “So instead of building a wall of an Aquafence around this facility, we’re providing that same protection by attaching it directly to the building.”

    Last week, Public Works began installing flood panels on the first building, which is the filter station. The panels protect critical equipment used in the final stages of wastewater cleaning, and much of it is located in a big underground bay, according to Tankersley.

    “After Helene, this entire bay was filled with water, standing water. We had to pump it out,” he said. “Electrical equipment over there was exposed to that saltwater and was damaged. So we had to repair all of that.”

    It takes three flood panels to cover one opening on the filter station. Tankersley said the city purchased 100 flood panels for the NE plant, which cost a little more than $1 million. That’s enough panels to protect 11 buildings. Tankersley said the panels are cost-effective because the price to raise one building would be tens of millions of dollars.

    “At some point in the future, when this (filter station) building becomes obsolete and the equipment in the building becomes obsolete, we may take advantage of raising it,” he said. “But to do so now would not make economic sense, and so these panels are significantly less expensive.”

    Tankersley said they also purchased the same amount of flood panels to protect the city’s Southwest Water Reclamation Facility from storm surge.

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    Josh Rojas

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  • Strong storms cross areas of Central Florida on Sunday

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    Strong storms cross areas of Central Florida on Sunday

    CATS AND DOGS. IF YOU WIN THE LOTTERY, THANKFULLY, YOU CAN BUY MILLIONS OF UMBRELLAS. BUT WE DO HAVE TONS OF SHOWERS HERE IN CENTRAL FLORIDA. IN FACT, THIS JUST DROPPED FROM THE STORM PREDICTION CENTER. IT’S A 5% CHANCE OF THE ISSUANCE OF A WATCH ACROSS SOME OF OUR NORTHERNMOST COUNTIES, INCLUDING OCALA, MARION COUNTY. EXCUSE ME. ALSO, FLAGLER, VOLUSIA COUNTY, JUST BECAUSE THIS IS WHERE WE HAVE OUR HIGHEST CONCENTRATION OF SHOWERS AND STORMS, ALL COURTESY OF THIS COLD FRONT HERE REALLY TAKING ITS TIME TO WORK ACROSS OUR SUNSHINE STATE. IT’S EVENTUALLY GOING TO STALL OUT, BUT AHEAD OF THAT FRONT, YOU SEE THE MESS THAT DOES EXIST, STRETCHING FROM JACKSONVILLE ALL THE WAY DOWN TO VOLUSIA COUNTY, IN WHICH WE’RE WATCHING FOR THOSE STRONGER STORMS CURRENTLY. NOW, TODAY, TOMORROW AND TUESDAY, THE RAIN THREAT IS ON. WE’RE WATCHING OUT FOR THAT CHANCE FOR POTENTIAL FLOODING, ESPECIALLY IN THE AFTERNOONS AND ACROSS THE EARLY EVENING WHEN MOST OF THE ACTIVITY IS TAKING PLACE. WE’RE TAKING YOU OUT TO VOLUSIA COUNTY RIGHT NOW WHERE WE ARE WATCHING A STRONGER STORM. THIS IS NEW SMYRNA BEACH. THE SHOWERS ARE COMING DOWN. WE DO HAVE SOME OFFICERS ON THE SHORELINE RIGHT NOW, HOPEFULLY GETTING PEOPLE INDOORS BECAUSE THE RAIN SHOWERS, THAT’S WHAT CONTINUES TO PILE UP. WE GOT THAT EAST COAST SEA BREEZE AS WELL. ADDING TO INSULT, ADDING INJURY TO INSULT. AND THAT’S WHAT’S GOING TO CAUSE FOR THESE STORMS TO PULSE UP THAT EAST COAST SEA BREEZE MEETING UP WITH OUTFLOW BOUNDARIES IN WHICH TEMPERATURES HAVE DROPPED DOWN TO THE MIDDLE OF THE 80S, STILL FEELS A LITTLE BIT WARM, THOUGH, COURTESY OF THE MOISTURE IN THE AIR. SO HERE’S THAT STRONG STORM THAT WE HAVE IN VOLUSIA COUNTY GOING TO BE WATCHING THIS FOR THE NEXT 15 MINUTES. BUT THIS IS WHERE WE HAD A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM. AND NOW WE DO HAVE A FLOOD ADVISORY ACROSS PARTS OF FLAGLER COUNTY. AS YOU MOVE WEST INTO SHELL BLUFF, CRESCENT CITY AS WELL, PALM COAST, YOU’RE STILL UNDER THAT STRONG STORM. AND THIS IS WHERE WE SHOWED SIGNS OF EARLIER ROTATION TO START OFF THE SHOW. RIGHT NOW, JUST SOME STRONG STRAIGHT LINE WINDS. THESE ARE GUSTING UPWARDS OF 20MPH AT TIMES. AND WE HAVE DEFINITELY ACCUMULATED RAIN IN THESE AREAS OUT TOWARDS SHELL BLUFF. WE’VE SEEN ABOUT FOUR INCHES OF RAIN STACK UP. SO THE WESTERN QUADRANT OF PUTNAM COUNTY IS WHERE WE HAVE OUR STRONGEST SHOWERS. BUT THIS SEA BREEZE MOVING INLAND ACROSS MEADOW WOODS NOW INTO THE TOURIST DISTRICT. THIS IS WHAT IT SPAWNED. YOU SEE THE STRONGER SHOWERS BEGINNING TO PILE UP OUT TOWARDS MEADOW WOODS. FLOOD ADVISORY FOR LAKE AND VOLUSIA COUNTY. THIS IS GOING TO BE ACTIVE ALL THE WAY THROUGH THE MIDDLE OF THE WORKWEEK, AS WE DO HAVE THAT RELENTLESS RAIN THAT’S NOT GOING TO LEAVE US ANYTIME SOON. AND THEN FURTHER UP TOWARDS THE NORTH, THIS IS ANOTHER STRONG STORM THAT WE HAVE WORKING ACROSS I-75 IN MARION COUNTY. SO FOR THE REST OF THE EVENING, WE’RE REALLY JUST WATCHING THE RAIN SHOWERS ALL THE WAY THROUGH THE MIDNIGHT HOUR. AS WE TAKE YOU THROUGH FUTURE CAST. STILL LOTS OF RAIN. STILL AT 8:00, PUSHING SOUTH INTO DELAND SANFORD AREA. THIS IS REALLY TAKING ITS TIME TO LEAVE OUR NECK OF THE WOODS, BUT BY MIDNIGHT MOST OF US ARE RAIN FREE AND WE’LL ACTUALLY OPEN THE DOOR FOR JUST A LITTLE BIT OF SUNSHINE. PEERING THROUGH YOUR WINDOW TOMORROW MORNING. OUT IN THE TROPICS, THINGS ARE FAIRLY QUIET, BUT THEY’RE NOT GOING TO STAY THAT WAY FOREVER. ONE AREA OF INTEREST THAT WE’LL BE WATCHING TOWARDS THE MIDDLE OF THE MONTH IS ACROSS THE GULF AND THE CARIBBEAN, BUT ALSO INTO THE CENTER OF THE ATLANTIC. THAT’S WHERE WE HAVE THAT 40% CHANCE FOR DEVELOPMENT COMING UP. SO WE’LL KEEP OUR EYES ON THOSE POTENTIAL DEVELOPMENTS. BUT WE’RE KEEPING OUR EYES ON THIS WEEK. HEAVY RAINFALL. WE COULD STACK UP ANOTHER 3 TO 5IN AS THIS STATIONARY BOUNDARY JUST HOVERS ACROSS THE I-4 CORRIDOR, KEEPING A SYSTEM OF LOW PRESSURE AROUND. AND THOSE STORMS WILL STAY CONSISTENT, TOO. SO YOUR SEVEN DAY FORECAST SHAPES UP LIKE THIS. COOLER? YES. WETTER. ALSO. YES 89 DEGREES. TO START OFF YOUR WORKWEEK TOMORROW WILL HOVER AROUND THE UPPER 80S. IN FACT, WE’RE GETTING SLIGHTLY COOLER AS WE ENTER YOUR NEXT WEEKEND WITH H

    Strong showers are expected to pop up across Central Florida on Sunday from 5 p.m. – 10 p.m.Today’s showers are expected to be about 60-70% with the major impacts including localized flooding and strong winds.Consistent rain coverage will keep temperatures cooler to start the workweek. >> Radar Active alertsA flood advisory is in effect for parts of Volusia County until 9:30 p.m. The advisory includes areas of Daytona Beach, Port Orange, South Daytona, Holly Hill,Daytona Beach Shores, Daytona Beach Airport, DaytonaInternational Speedway, Ponce Inlet, Allandale, Wilbur-by-the-Sea and Samsula-Spruce Creek.The Port Orange Police Department is asking drivers to use caution when traveling around the city. They have received several calls of flooding over the roadways and vehicles becoming disabled.US1 / Dunlawton Ave is partially closedMoody Bridge on S Williamson Blvd has water over the bridge. Use caution, as there are also traffic delays in the areaDunlawton Ave between Jackson St and Nova Rd is floodedFirst Warning Weather Stay with WESH 2 online and on-air for the most accurate Central Florida weather forecast.RadarSevere Weather AlertsDownload the WESH 2 News app to get the most up-to-date weather alerts. The First Warning Weather team includes First Warning Chief Meteorologist Tony Mainolfi, Eric Burris, Kellianne Klass, Marquise Meda and Cam Tran.What is Impact Weather?Impact Weather suggests weather conditions could be disruptive or a nuisance for travel and day-to-day activities.What is a Severe Weather Warning Day?A Severe Weather Warning Day suggests weather conditions that could potentially harm life or property.

    Strong showers are expected to pop up across Central Florida on Sunday from 5 p.m. – 10 p.m.

    Today’s showers are expected to be about 60-70% with the major impacts including localized flooding and strong winds.

    Consistent rain coverage will keep temperatures cooler to start the workweek.

    >> Radar

    Active alerts

    • A flood advisory is in effect for parts of Volusia County until 9:30 p.m. The advisory includes areas of Daytona Beach, Port Orange, South Daytona, Holly Hill,
      Daytona Beach Shores, Daytona Beach Airport, Daytona
      International Speedway, Ponce Inlet, Allandale, Wilbur-by-the-Sea and Samsula-Spruce Creek.

    The Port Orange Police Department is asking drivers to use caution when traveling around the city. They have received several calls of flooding over the roadways and vehicles becoming disabled.

    • US1 / Dunlawton Ave is partially closed
    • Moody Bridge on S Williamson Blvd has water over the bridge. Use caution, as there are also traffic delays in the area
    • Dunlawton Ave between Jackson St and Nova Rd is flooded

    This content is imported from Facebook.
    You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

    First Warning Weather

    Stay with WESH 2 online and on-air for the most accurate Central Florida weather forecast.

    Download the WESH 2 News app to get the most up-to-date weather alerts.

    The First Warning Weather team includes First Warning Chief Meteorologist Tony Mainolfi, Eric Burris, Kellianne Klass, Marquise Meda and Cam Tran.

    What is Impact Weather?

    Impact Weather suggests weather conditions could be disruptive or a nuisance for travel and day-to-day activities.

    What is a Severe Weather Warning Day?

    A Severe Weather Warning Day suggests weather conditions that could potentially harm life or property.

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  • Parents of Camp Mystic flood victim remember daughter amid push for camp safety measures

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    Texas Gov. Greg Abbott is expected to sign a bill into law on camp safety Friday after the devastating and deadly flooding in July. Families of children who died are backing the bill called “Heaven’s 27 Camp Safety Act.” CBS News’ Jason Allen spoke to a couple whose 18-year-old daughter was one of the 27 victims who died in the Camp Mystic flooding.

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  • More than half of U.S. is now included in mapping tool for flood forecasts. Here’s what to know.

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    A mapping tool that aims to provide forecasters and communities with flooding information has expanded to cover 60% of the U.S. population, the National Weather Service announced Thursday. With this development, the experimental tool promises to serve twice as many Americans as it did before. 

    The Flood Inundation Mapping, or FIM, tool is designed to show Google Earth-like visualizations of flood waters as they are either impacting, or forecasted to impact, neighborhoods across the country, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, or NOAA. NOAA is the federal parent agency of the Weather Service, which is a primary source of weather forecasts during emergencies, including floods.

    The interactive, online tool allows people to learn more about flood forecasts or observations that could affect them, by exploring their regions, cities or neighborhoods. NOAA said the mapping interface updates almost in real time, which will support Weather Service forecasters in issuing flood watches and warnings.

    Some local forecast offices have already had access to the tool for two years, while others have had access for one year, depending on where they are. When it launched in 2023, the tool offered flooding information for about 10% of the U.S. population, and it expanded to include 30% last September, according to NOAA.

    On social media Wednesday, NOAA and the Weather Service shared a simulated image generated by the tool, which showed possible flooding along the Tug Fork River in Warfield, Kentucky, in February. 

    NOAA


    “Local emergency teams used those maps to deploy the National Guard with high-water vehicles to affected neighborhoods where they evacuated all the residents before water entered their apartments,” the agencies said. 

    Originally, the mapping feature was accessible to forecasting offices in parts of Louisiana, New York, Pennsylvania and Texas, and it later grew to include much larger parts of the Great Lakes, Mid-Atlantic, Mississippi Valley and Pacific Northwest regions. Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands were also covered.

    The latest expansion means forecasters can use the map’s services in the Great Plains, interior Southeast, Southwest and West Coast. It now covers Hawaii and parts of Alaska, too, including the Cook Inlet, Kenai Peninsula, Copper River and Prince William Sound, where flooding can be especially severe.

    fim60-infographic-nws.png

    The Flood Inundation Mapping tool now extends from the Northeast to Gulf Coast and across much of the Midwest, along the West Coast, and across Hawaii, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands and parts of south-central Alaska.

    NOAA


    “Flooding is the most frequent severe weather-related threat, and our costliest natural disaster,” said David Vallee of NOAA’s National Water Center, in a statement. “Expanding our FIM availability has been a game-changer in providing actionable, real-time information to emergency and water resource managers, and will expand the delivery of impact-based decision support services to our core partners who work to keep Americans safe and informed.”

    The mapping tool will be fully activated across the U.S. next year, NOAA said, adding that it will include 110,000 river miles near the Weather Service’s river forecast centers, which handle predictions in different regions. It will also cover more than 3.6 million miles of rivers being monitored for the National Water Model, a massive simulation that uses real data to help forecasters make predictions about the flow of rivers and streams throughout the U.S.

    Sharpening communications between forecasters, emergency managers and first responders during weather emergencies, like the catastrophic floods that struck Texas in July, is a subject of national concern, particularly at the peak of the current hurricane season.  

    CBS News has reached out to NOAA for more information.

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  • Map shows flash flooding warning issued for eight states

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    The National Weather Service (NWS) is warning that heavy rainfall could produce flash flooding across eight states, potentially impacting millions of people.

    The NWS posted on Facebook on Sunday afternoon to alert people in California, Utah, Colorado, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas and New Mexico of the risk amid “resurgent monsoon activity.”

    Newsweek has reached out to the NWS via email Sunday during non-working hours for more information.

    Why It Matters

    Flash floods have occurred with growing frequency and severity across the United States this summer including New Mexico, North Carolina, New Jersey and Chicago.

    Sunday’s warning from the agency comes as flash floods in multiple states, including the deadly flooding in Texas along the Guadalupe River, have left communities grappling to recover.

    What To Know

    A map shared by the NWS on Facebook showed a broad corridor of flash-flood risk spanning the Western states and Southern Plains.

    The agency highlighted heavy rainfall as the primary threat and warned of potential flash floods in urban areas, low-lying roadways, streams and burn-scarred landscapes.

    “Heavy showers and thunderstorms developing and expanding in coverage across southern CO and northern NM will pose a threat for flash flooding going into the early evening hours,” a post from NWS said on X on Sunday afternoon. “The area burn scar locations and normally dry washes will be most susceptible to impacts.”

    At the national level, forecasters had explained that warm, moisture-laden air and slow-moving storm systems increased flash-flood risk during the summer months, a dynamic that had driven recent deadly events.

    In the West, the risk for dangerous flash flooding increases in areas impacted by wildfires, as burn-scarred terrain can produce life-threatening flows of water after intense downpours.

    A map from the National Weather Service shows areas where heavy rain is expected on August 24 in the U.S.

    NWS

    What People Are Saying

    The National Weather Service said in a post on Facebook Sunday: “Heavy rain could produce instances of flash flooding across parts of the Four Corners, Great Basin, Sierra Nevada and Central/Southern Plains amid resurgent monsoon activity. Extreme heat continues over portions of the Southwest and Pacific Northwest.”

    Kody Wilson, a freelance meteorologist, posted on X: “At 1217 PM MDT, Doppler radar indicated thunderstorms producing heavy rain across the warned area. Flash flooding is ongoing or expected to begin shortly. Emergency personnel have reported debris flows across County Road 5 [in Colorado]. Excessive rainfall over the burn scar will result in debris flow. The debris flow can consist of rock, mud, vegetation and other loose materials.”

    What Happens Next?

    Local NWS forecast offices will continue to monitor conditions and issue watches, warnings and more detailed forecasts.

    Those living in the states impacted are advised to monitor forecast updates from their nearest NWS office and local emergency management authorities for real-time guidance.

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  • Changes to FEMA maps could mean Clearwater residents will need flood insurance

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    CLEARWATER, Fla. — Hundreds of Clearwater homes could be added to special flood hazard areas on FEMA maps. That would mean some homeowners would be newly required to buy flood insurance. 


    What You Need To Know

    • Changes may be coming to FEMA flood insurance rate maps for the Alligator Creek Watershed
    • Clearwater’s floodplain administrator says 369 buildings in the city are added to the special flood hazard area on the preliminary maps, while 203 others are removed
    • Homeowners added to the hazard area with federally backed loans or a mortgage would be required to get flood insurance
    • A 90-day comment period on the preliminary maps is expected later this year


    “This is very similar to what we currently have,” Clearwater Floodplain Administrator Gene Henry said of the preliminary maps.

    Henry said the city started gathering data for the updated flood insurance rate maps five years ago. That information was passed on to FEMA, which created the new maps. 

    “You’ll get this blue area, and that’s called the special flood hazard area,” Henry said, gesturing to one of the maps. “So, there are going to be changes on people’s properties.”

    According to Henry, the preliminary maps for the Alligator Creek Watershed add 369 buildings in the city to that hazard area, while another 203 would be removed.

    “It’s better data. So, more accuracy,” Henry said of the reason for the changes. “They’ve got the LIDAR now, they’ve got better contour interval information.”

    Clearwater Floodplain Administrator Gene Henry said that the owners of any homes added who have a federally backed loan or a mortgage will now need to get flood insurance. (Spectrum News/Sarah Blazonis)

    Henry said that the owners of any homes added who have a federally backed loan or a mortgage will now need to get flood insurance. Residents outside the hazard areas can learn from the updated maps about spots around them that are now in the hazard areas.

    “The orange areas are the .2%, or what we call the 500-year. Flood insurance is not required, but if someone would ask me, I would say get the low-risk policy,” Henry said. “That flood hazard area may not have been there before, or it may not have gone down that street, but you saw the water there in Milton, or you saw it in one of the other events. So, the models pick it up because we have to know that.”

    Henry told Spectrum News the city has time to work through what the maps mean for residents. A 90-day comment period will be held later this year for residents and businesses to weigh in on the maps and let the city know if they think any of the changes are incorrect. That will be passed on to FEMA for consideration. The city also created a website where residents can enter their address and see if they’re impacted by the changes.

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    Sarah Blazonis

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  • High tides, erosion, dangerous surf: Photos of Hurricane Erin impacts on NC coast

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    This photo gallery shows the impacts of high tides, erosion and dangerous surf conditions as Hurricane Erin’s center of circulation passes the North Carolina coastline between Aug. 20-21, 2025.

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  • St. Pete Resident Task Force will tour flood prone neighborhoods

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    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — The St. Pete Resident Task Force pilot program will kick off next month with a bus tour of the Shore Acres and Riviera Bay neighborhoods to find innovative flood mitigation solutions.


    What You Need To Know

    • St. Pete Resident Task Force pilot program will begin with bus tour of the Shore Acres and Riviera Bay neighborhoods on May 10
    • The group was created by the City of St. Petersburg and the the Tampa Bay Regional Planning Council 
    • A third party engineering consultant company will also join the group and create a topographical map of flood hot-spots
    • A public workshop for all neighborhoods will be held at the Coliseum on Aug. 9


    “The city is giving residents a seat at the table,” said Kevin Batdorf, President Shore Acres Civic Association. “Which is what we asked for and is being proactive in helping to develop a plan that someday may stop flooding or at least get our homes out of harm’s way.”

    The task force was created by the City of St. Petersburg and the Tampa Bay Regional Planning Council to look for flooding solutions with neighborhood leaders. A third party engineering consultant company will also join the group.

    “During this process, they are going to create a topographical map of the areas affected by flood to show where the hot-spots are.” said Batdorf. “Look at the problem through a different set of eyes and possibly come up with some alternative solutions that haven’t been considered.”

    Batdorf said Hurricane Helene flooded 82% of the homes in Shore Acres last September, sending water inside 2,196 homes.

    Vanessa Pugliese is the President of the Riviera Bay Civic Association and said all 1,250 homes in the Riviera Bay neighborhood were flooded, but some only had water in the garage.

    “There’s a lot of sections of the neighborhood where it’s RVs and pods still,” she said. “We’re having issues that we never had before and we’re noticing all of the development around us and all of the runoff and it’s all dumping in our canals.”

    Pugliese said she has been trying to get the city to dredge the canals because they fill up with sand after every storm.

    “We’re hoping that is one of the things that the Tampa Bay Regional Planning Commission does recommend for Riviera Bay is to dredge the system of canals to help protect the homes,” she said. “The depth of this canal has been reduced so far that you can barely get a kayak in here anymore. And even worse so after Helene.”

    The city had planned to raise a low-lying seawall along a canal last September, but those plans were put on hold after Helene, according to Pugliese. She’s looking for bolder recommendations from the task force but is skeptical.

    “We are hoping that maybe they have some bigger infrastructure ideas for managing the water, not just in Riviera Bay, but of the surrounding areas that brings it into our area,” said Pugliese. “We had that meeting a year ago and nothing has changed in Riviera Bay since. There hasn’t been a project completed. There hasn’t been a project started of any significance. So we’re a little bit wary.”

    The St. Pete Resident Task Force will focus on maintenance and upgrades to infrastructure that draw on best practices, according to TBRPC. The pilot program will combine studies to get results for future projects.

    The bus tour is scheduled for May 10 and is open to the public, although with limited seating, residents may have to follow in their car, according to Batdorf. The Shore Acres tour will run from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. followed by Riviera Bay from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.

    The tour will extend to North, West, Central and South neighborhoods on May 17 and 31. A public workshop for all neighborhoods will be held at the Coliseum on Aug. 9.

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    Josh Rojas

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