Louisiana
Tropical rainstorm to bring deluge of rain to Texas, Louisiana
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This AccuWeather Enhanced RealVue satellite image shows the strengthening tropical rainstorm over the Yucatan Peninsula late on Sunday, June 16. |
After a tropical rainstorm brought heavy rainfall to portions of Florida last week, AccuWeather hurricane experts warn that yet another tropical rainstorm is expected to impact the southern U.S. in the coming days.
In addition to the tropical rainstorm, two other areas in the Atlantic Basin are being monitored for tropical development later this week. It is possible that one of these areas could strengthen into Alberto, becoming the first named storm of the season.
AccuWeather began to highlight portions of the western Gulf of Mexico as a high risk on Thursday afternoon. A tropical rainstorm developed late on Sunday and is forecast to steer toward the border between Mexico and Texas early this week. The storm is expected to drift north-northwestward into Wednesday, bringing with it rounds of heavy rain.
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“Very warm waters in this area of the Gulf, as well as low wind shear will make this a conducive environment the tropical rainstorm to strengthen,” said AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Dan Pydynowski.
Given these factors, the rainstorm is forecast to strengthen into a tropical depression, then a tropical storm right before making landfall along the northern Gulf Coast of Mexico. Should the storm produce sustained winds of 39 mph or greater prior to any other development in the Atlantic Basin, it would be given the name Alberto.
A tropical storm is likely to bring widespread gusts to the Mexican states of Tamaulipas and Nuevo Leon, as well as portions of South Texas. Some storm surge can also be expected along the coast north of the storm’s landfall. For both Mexico and the United States, given the risk for damaging winds, storm surge and flooding rainfall, this storm is a 1 on the AccuWeather RealImpact™ Scale for Hurricanes.
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Given the limited time over water and close proximity to land, the tropical system will need to intensify quickly in order to reach tropical storm strength before landfall late on Wednesday.
“Even if the tropical storm falls short of reaching tropical storm status, a plume of rich, deep tropical moisture is expected to surge into Mexico, Texas and Louisiana into the middle of the week,” Pydynowski explained.
Heavy rain is forecast to extend well north of the center of the storm, beginning as early as Monday.
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A wet Monday morning commute is expected along the Interstate 10 corridor from New Orleans to Houston, as downpours threaten to slow travel, reduced visibility and cause flooding. Rain is forecast to continue into Wednesday before some of the heavier downpours shift north up the Mississippi River Valley and westward into more of Texas.
The ample supply of tropical moisture could allow rainfall totals to add up quickly, bringing the risk for over half a foot of rain across parts of the Texas and Louisiana Gulf Coasts. An AccuWeather Local StormMax™ of 30 inches is possible in the hardest-hit areas, resulting in road closures.
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The Houston area has already received over 6 inches of rain through the first half of June, which is an amount more typical for the entire month. This new round of heavy rainfall to the already drenched area could bring renewed flooding woes for southeastern Texas.
Other zones along the Gulf Coast could use the rain. Brownsville, Texas, has only had 0.17 of an inch of rain so far in June, 14% of the historical average. In New Orleans, only 10% of the month’s typical rain fell in the first 15 days of June. In these areas, the soil may be so dry from the lack of recent rain that flash flooding could occur in the heavier downpours.
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Behind this wave of tropical rainfall, it’s not out of the question that another tropical system could form near the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico late in the week.
“With warm waters and low shear still present in the southern Gulf of Mexico and northwestern Caribbean next weekend, yet another opportunity for tropical development may present itself,” warned Pydynowski.
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Depending on the wind pattern in the atmosphere, any moisture from this area may again funnel into the Gulf Coast for the last week of June. Given the expected rain in the coming week, the risk for localized flooding may increase.
As the middle of the week approaches, yet another area could see a developing tropical system, according to AccuWeather meteorologists.
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“This appears to be a quick-moving and compact low pressure area that will be moving westward into northeastern Florida or perhaps as far north as southeastern Georgia on Thursday,” said Pydynowski.
A stronger storm could bring gusty winds, especially to coastal locations. But even a less-organized storm would bring rough surf and downpours from the northern Bahamas to the Southeast Atlantic Coast.
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Heavy tropical rainfall may hit some of the same areas that were drenched with last week’s tropical rainstorm. The highest rainfall totals are likely to miss to the north of Miami, which had over 11 inches of rain, and the town of Aventura, where 20 inches of rain fell. Instead, locations from Melbourne, Florida, to Charleston, South Carolina, may be more at risk for the heavy rain.
The zone currently primed for the heaviest rain has had very little rain so far this month, including Jacksonville, Florida, which only has reported 0.64 of an inch.
Forecasters will continue to monitor the development potential of all three areas throughout the week.
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Louisiana
Abortion pill dispute returns to Supreme Court
On Saturday, two companies that manufacture mifepristone came to the court in Danco Laboratories v. Louisiana, asking the justices to pause a ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit in a lawsuit by Louisiana that reinstated the requirement that the drug, which is used in about 60% of abortions nationwide, be dispensed only in person. Danco and GenBioPro told the justices that the 5th Circuit’s order was “unprecedented” and “injects immediate confusion and upheaval into highly time-sensitive medical decisions.”
Nearly two years ago, the Supreme Court ruled that doctors and medical groups opposed to abortion did not have a legal right to sue, known as standing, to challenge the Food and Drug Administration’s expansion of access to mifepristone.
The 2024 case, FDA v. Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine, was filed in federal court in Texas by several individual doctors who are opposed to abortion on religious or moral grounds, as well as medical groups whose members are opposed to abortion. The plaintiffs asked U.S. District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk to rescind both the FDA’s initial approval of the drug in 2000 and its 2016 and 2021 expansions of access to the drug, arguing that mifepristone is unsafe and that the process that the FDA used to approve the drug was flawed.
The FDA, as well as several leading medical groups, countered that, based on extensive evidence, mifepristone is safe and effective. Kacsmaryk, however, suspended the FDA’s approval of the drug and the agency’s later changes, made in 2016 and 2021, to the conditions on the use of the drug – which included allowing the drug to be used through the 10th week of pregnancy, allowing health-care providers who are not physicians to prescribe the drug, and permitting it to be prescribed without an in-person visit.
The FDA and Danco, which manufactures mifepristone, appealed to the 5th Circuit. The court upheld the part of Kacsmaryk’s ruling that rolled back the agency’s 2016 and 2021 changes that had expanded access to mifepristone.
In April 2023, the Supreme Court temporarily put the 5th Circuit’s ruling on hold, ensuring continued access to the drug. In June 2024, it reversed the lower court’s ruling and sent the case back to the lower courts.
In his opinion for the court, Justice Brett Kavanaugh acknowledged what he characterized as the challengers’ “sincere legal, moral, ideological, and policy objections” to elective abortion “by others” and to FDA’s 2016 and 2021 changes to the conditions on the use of the drug. But the challengers could not contest those changes, he said, because they had not shown that they would be harmed by the FDA’s mifepristone policies; under the Constitution, these kinds of objections are not enough to bring a case in federal court.
In October 2025, Louisiana filed its own lawsuit in federal court to seek the reinstatement of the in-person dispensing requirement. It emphasized that it had standing to sue because it had “incontrovertible evidence that … doctors and others are (as the Biden administration intended) sending streams of mifepristone by mail into Louisiana for the express purpose of causing thousands of abortions in Louisiana every year. That conduct directly violates Louisiana’s abortion laws, which – subject to very narrow exceptions (such as to save the life of the mother) – bar virtually all abortions, and prevents Louisiana from protecting the lives of unborn babies despite the promise of Dobbs” v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, the Supreme Court’s 2022 decision holding that the Constitution does not confer a right to an abortion. “That conduct has directly generated medical emergencies that harm Louisiana women,” the state wrote, “and emergency room visits that harm the state.”
Rosalie Markezich, an individual plaintiff who joined the state’s lawsuit, said that in 2023 she was coerced into taking abortion drugs “that her boyfriend obtained via the U.S. Postal Service from a doctor in California.” If the in-person dispensing requirement had been in effect, she said, she “would have received the protection of a private in-person medical appointment,” during which she would “have been able to tell a doctor that she did not want an abortion.”
After a federal judge put the case on hold while the FDA conducts its own review of mifepristone’s safety, Louisiana went to the 5th Circuit, asking that court to re-impose the requirement while litigation continues. The court of appeals ruled that Louisiana has a right to sue because, by allowing mifepristone to be prescribed by telehealth and sent by mail, the “FDA ‘opened the door for mifepristone to be remotely prescribed to Louisiana women,’” even though Louisiana generally bars abortion.
In their emergency application, the drug companies tell the justices that, like the doctors and medical groups in 2024, “Louisiana is not required to ‘prescribe or use mifepristone’ or to ‘do anything or to refrain from doing anything’ as a result of FDA’s actions.” The companies argue that the 5th Circuit should have applied the same analysis that the Supreme Court used in holding that the doctors and medical groups did not have standing in 2024. They stress that the Supreme Court “has already held that claims of downstream financial harm by doctors who provide follow-up care for treating complications after a medication abortion is too attenuated” to provide standing to sue. Here, they say, “Louisiana’s theory—that it can base standing on having to pay those doctors if someone who received FDA-approved mifepristone through the mail seeks follow-up care to treat a complication—is a more attenuated version of the” theories that the court specifically rejected two years ago. And Louisiana’s claim that it is injured because of the disconnect between federal law and its own state law is not the kind of injury that courts can review, they said.
The drug companies also ask the court to issue a short-term order, known as an administrative stay, that would put the 5th Circuit’s ruling on hold while the justices consider their request.
The drug companies’ request goes initially to Justice Samuel Alito, who handles emergency requests from the 5th Circuit. Alito is likely to ask Louisiana to respond before acting on the companies’ request.
Louisiana
Thoroughbred season has opened at Louisiana Downs
SHREVEPORT, La. (KSLA) – Beginning Saturday, and running through September 30, thoroughbred racing returns to Louisiana Downs.
Saturday, the historic venue will celebrate ‘Kentucky Derby’ Day, by having watch parties of the big event, alongside having live racing.
After this weekend, Louisiana Downs will race on a Monday and Tuesday schedule, with post start times slated for 4:05.
Exceptions to the normal schedule include a July 3 date to celebrate Independence Day.
Copyright 2026 KSLA. All rights reserved.
Louisiana
Civil rights groups react to court ruling on Louisiana congressional map
Supreme Court strikes down Louisiana congressional map
The Supreme Court struck down a Louisiana congressional map that may limit the power of the 1965 Voting Rights act.
Civil rights leaders and groups responded to the U.S. Supreme Court’s Wednesday ruling to strike down Louisiana’s congressional map, saying the decision dismantles the state’s second majority-Black district and weakens Black voting power across the state.
In a statement to the Times, All Streets All People (ASAP), a Shreveport-based community organizing and grassroots organization, said the Callais decision is a reminder of something everyday people across North Louisiana already know — the systems that govern our lives are not neutral — and they do not move unless we move them.
The organization said for far too long, decisions that shape their communities — schools, resources, political power — have been made without us, or in ways that dilute our voice when we do show up. They said the decision does not exist in isolation. It sits inside a larger pattern where power is protected, access is managed, and the people most impacted are expected to accept less.
“This is exactly the gap we are organizing to close,” said Omari Ho-Sang, executive director of All Streets All People. “You cannot ask people to defend a democracy they don’t feel while they are struggling just to survive. Our responsibility is to make civic power real in people’s lives — to connect it directly to whether our communities can live, not just get by.”
Louisiana District of NAACP
The Louisiana District of the NAACP issued the following statement:
“Today’s ruling in Louisiana v. Callais is a reminder that progress is never guaranteed and that the work of protecting our communities is ongoing.
“While the decision carries serious implications, it does not change who we are or what we are called to do. We have never backed away from a challenge, and we will not start now. Our commitment to fair representation and equal protection under the law remains firm.
“We know that change has always come because people were willing to stand up, speak out, and stay engaged. That responsibility continues today. We encourage our communities to remain informed, to stay involved, and to continue building the power needed to shape our future by holding elected officials accountable and showing up at the ballot box every election.
“This moment does not stop us. It strengthens our resolve. We will keep organizing, mobilizing and advocating until every voice is fully represented and respected.
“The NAACP Louisiana State Conference moves forward with determination, knowing that the path ahead requires persistence, unity, and action.”
Breka Peoples of The Peoples’ Promise
“As a voting rights advocate and community organizer, this ruling is deeply disappointing but not surprising. We continue to see decisions that weaken fair representation, especially for Black communities across Louisiana. Maps are not just lines they determine who has power and whose voice is heard.
“When those lines are drawn in a way that silences us, it’s not just a legal issue, it’s a democracy issue. But let me be clear this is not the moment to get discouraged, it’s the moment to get organized. We will keep educating our communities, pushing for maps, and building power where it matters on the ground. They may try to redraw the lines, but we’re going to redraw the power.
“It’s time to out organize the system, all hands on deck. As an organizer, I’m already in motion.”
Follow Ian Robinson on Twitter @_irobinson and on Facebook at https://bit.ly/3vln0w1.
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