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    Sunday, May 05, 2024

    Bermuda braces for approach of Hurricane Humberto; tropical storm drenches Texas coast

    Vehicles splash through heavy water filling Chimney Rock, south of Brays Bayou in Houston, Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2019. Officials in the Houston area were preparing high-water vehicles and staging rescue boats Tuesday as Tropical Storm Imelda moved in from the Gulf of Mexico, threatening to dump up to 18 inches of rain in parts of Southeast Texas and southwestern Louisiana over the next few days. (Mark Mulligan/Houston Chronicle via AP)

    MIAMI (AP) — Hurricane Humberto grew into a powerful Category 3 storm Tuesday evening, and officials on Bermuda made plans for early shutdowns of schools, public transportation and government offices on the British Atlantic territory ahead of the storm's likely close pass on Wednesday.

    Tropical Storm Imelda, meanwhile, swept ashore on Texas' Gulf coast and weakened into a tropical depression, but still threatened to deluge parts of Southwest Texas and southwestern Louisiana with up to 18 inches of rain over the next few days. It was the first named storm to hit the Houston area since Hurricane Harvey's heavy rains flooded more than 150,000 homes around the city and caused an estimated $125 billion in damages in Texas

    In Bermuda, National Security Minister Wayne Caines told reporters that schools, government offices and ferries on the island would close at noon Wednesday and bus service would end at 4 p.m. as officials got ready for Humberto.

    Officials said tropical storm-force winds were expected to start hitting Bermuda, with hurricane-force gusts, starting about 3 p.m. Wednesday and lasting until about 4 a.m. Thursday. Humberto was predicted to pass just to the north of Bermuda, but a small shift in track could bring the storm over the island itself.

    The U.S. National Hurricane Center said Humberto's maximum sustained winds strengthened to 115 mph and it would probably remain a Category 3 hurricane through Thursday though there could be some fluctuations in its winds. The storm was centered about 370 miles west of Bermuda and moving to the east-northeast at 12 mph.

    Bermuda was expected to see rainfall of up to 4 inches, with large swells along the coast.

    Meanwhile, Tropical Storm Lorena formed off Mexico's Pacific Coast, and forecasters predicted heavy rains and flooding by Thursday, likely without it reaching hurricane force.

    Lorena had top winds of 50 mph Tuesday evening. It was centered about 185 miles south of the resort town of Zihuatanejo and was moving northwest at 15 mph.

    A tropical storm warning was in effect for the coast between Zihuatanejo and Cabo Corrientes.

    Two other tropical storms, Kiko and Mario, were farther out in the Pacific and posed no threat to land.

    Tropical Depression Ten also formed far out in the Atlantic and could become a hurricane Friday as it nears the outermost Caribbean islands.

    Felipe Morales works on getting his truck out of a ditch filled with high water during a rainstorm stemming from rain bands spawned by Tropical Storm Imelda on Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2019, in Houston. He was able to get help when a man with a truck helped pull him from the ditch. (Brett Coomer/Houston Chronicle via AP)
    A woman closes her umbrella after getting into her car during a rainstorm stemming from rain bands spawned by Tropical Storm Imelda near I-45 and Almeda-Genoa on Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2019, in Houston. (Brett Coomer/Houston Chronicle via AP)/Houston Chronicle via AP

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