The first named storm of the 2024 Atlantic hurricane season, named Alberto, formed in the southern Gulf of Mexico late Wednesday morning. Forecasters at the National Hurricane Center declared the storm formed about 295 miles south-southeast of Brownsville, Tex. as torrential downpours were moving ashore in South Texas and northeast Mexico.
Texas
Tropical Alberto forms while bringing flooding rains and an ocean surge to Texas
The storm is forecast to make landfall in northeast Mexico Thursday morning while spreading impacts as far north as coastal Louisiana.
It’s the United States’ first taste of tropical trouble, but experts are calling for a long, busy season with many more threats on the way.
While approaching the coast of northeast Mexico, the potential tropical storm was also pushing a surge of ocean water ashore, leading to coastal flooding along the southern Texas coast early Wednesday. Social media video showed water inundating coastal communities, flowing over roads and underneath elevated homes while overwhelming storms drains.
Forecasters at the National Hurricane Center said the peak storm surge could reach up to 2 to 4 feet, including around Galveston Bay.
Flood watches blanket South Texas and the Rio Grande Valley, and stretch along the coastline to Cameron Parish, La. The alerts no longer include Houston, since the heaviest rains should stay primarily south of the metro.
A tropical storm warning does, however, cover coastal counties from just south of Galveston to the U.S.-Mexico border, and incudes Rockport, Corpus Christi and Brownsville. While the system may not organize enough to earn the name Alberto, tropical storm-force winds with 50-mph gusts are still probable along the shoreline.
Rockport was gusting to 36 mph around 7 a.m. Central time, and Padre Island to 39 mph. Rainfall totals have been light thus far, with Brownsville leading the pack at 0.95 inches. That said, the core of the deep tropical moisture, and subsequent downpours, will soon arrive.
As of 10 a.m. Central time, Alberto had maximum sustained winds of 40 mph and was moving west at 8 mph. The Hurricane Center said Alberto is a large tropical storm with tropical-storm-force winds extending up to 415 miles north of the center.
Scattered downpours were pivoting ashore in South Texas, and will become more numerous and intense as the day wears on. The heaviest rains will last from noon to midnight in southern regions, and probably won’t make it much north of San Antonio or Victoria.
A widespread 4 to 8 inches is likely in South Texas, with localized totals over 10 inches possible. Downpours will taper to intermittent showers by early Thursday.
A near record-moist air mass will be in place, allowing for intense rainfall rates. A weather balloon launched Wednesday morning from Brownsville recorded 2.78 inches of moisture present from the bottom to the top of the atmosphere. That’s just shy of the 2.93-inch record set on July 17, 1996.
Some of the storm’s most serious flooding is probable in northeast Mexico and Central America.
“Life-threatening flooding and mudslides are likely in and near areas of higher terrain across the Mexican states of Coahuila, Nuevo Leon, and Tamaulipas, including the cities of Monterrey and Ciudad Victoria,” the Hurricane Center wrote.
However, some of the rainfall in Mexico will be quite beneficial, as the area has been enduring serious drought.
Rains from a large, swirling area of showers and thunderstorms across the southwest Gulf of Mexico and Central America, known as the Central American Gyre, have produced disastrous flooding in parts Guatemala and El Salvador, causing at least 14 fatalities, according to the Associated Press. This same gyre spawned the potential tropical storm heading into Mexico and could give rise another in the Gulf of Mexico next week.
It’s still looking like 40- to 50-mph gusts will be possible along the immediate coastline from Houston-Galveston southward, with lesser but still blustery winds expected inland.
The onshore flow will push water against the coast, leading to a surge of up to 2 to 4 feet in the most prone areas and 1 to 3 feet elsewhere. Because of the system’s sprawling circulation, the surge was forecast to affect areas hundreds of miles from its center, as far away as the western shore of Louisiana.
Even though Potential Tropical Cyclone 1 is well south of us and is expected to move into Mexico, this is what it’s doing along the Southeast Texas coast. This video was shot this morning is Sea Isle on the west end of Galveston. (Video: George and Alice Jensen)… pic.twitter.com/N0CMsMVo7C
— KHOU 11 News Houston (@KHOU) June 19, 2024
With landfalling tropical cyclones and disturbances, sporadic tornadoes sometimes occur ahead, and to the right, of the center. Since South Texas will be in the “front right quadrant” of the system, a subtle change of low-level winds with height, known as wind shear, could support an isolated tornado risk.
The National Weather Service Storm Prediction Center has advertised a Level 1 out of 5 Marginal risk for severe weather.
Jason Samenow contributed to this report.
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Top Playmaker Landen Williams-Callis to Take Texas Official Visit Next Weekend
Landen Williams-Callis hasn’t been discussed a ton in the last month or two. Real information as it relates to Texas’ chances has been a bit tougher to come by on the elite running back from Richmond Randle. Today, Inside Texas was able to confirm that he’ll take an official visit to Texas next weekend. We’ve long known Texas wanted LW-C, but we haven’t had a good gauge on his interest in Texas.
Texas
Texas confirms five new world screwworm cases, sets infested zones to contain spread
The New World screwworm outbreak in Texas has reached five confirmed cases, prompting state agencies to establish infested zones aimed at containing the parasite’s spread.
Federal help is now involved as officials respond to the threat posed by the parasite, whose fly larvae burrow into the living flesh of warm-blooded animals, causing severe tissue damage and potential death.
“We know this development is a serious threat,” U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins said. “We’ve increased the trapping for flies along the border and ramping up surveillance.”
The Texas Animal Health Commission has established four 12.5-mile infested zones where officials believe the parasite is located and reproducing. The closest zone to Austin is Zone 3, which includes Gillespie, Kerr, and Kimble counties.
Zone 3 was created after New World screwworm was found in a goat in Harper, Texas, on Monday. Rollins also said, “Over the past week and a half, USDA has confirmed 6 cases of the new world screw worm within the US, all but 1 in the South, uh, South of Texas.”
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State officials say the zones are used to prevent the spread of the parasite and restrict the movement of livestock and other warm-blooded animals through the area.
In Fredericksburg, some residents said the infested zone is a necessary step. Joan Smith, who lives in Fredericksburg, said, “It’s a good thing to protect people. It needs to be done.”
Smith said pet owners should take precautions and consult their veterinarians.
“Many of our neighbors, we called our local veterinarians. They told us as long as we were using certain medications, your pet is covered,” she said. “Definitely talk to your local veterinarians because they can update you.”
Some businesses in the area said the county’s infested-zone label is not expected to impact tourism this summer.
Texas
Texas landowners fight massive transmission line project at Austin hearing
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AUSTIN (KXAN) — Hundreds of Texas landowners gathered in Austin this week to challenge proposed transmission line routes tied to a major statewide power infrastructure project.
The Bell County East to Big Hill 765-kV transmission project, proposed by Oncor and the Lower Colorado River Authority, is designed to move power across Texas and strengthen the state grid as demand rises from population growth, data centers and industrial expansion.
In March, the utilities filed plans with the Public Utility Commission of Texas that included 122 potential route options.
This week, administrative judges are hearing testimony about those routes before eventually making recommendations to the PUC.
For Burnet County resident Jan Rose, the possibility of a transmission line crossing her property is overwhelming.
“It’s going to traverse our property, not along the property lines, but right through the middle, about 150 feet from our front door,” Rose said.
What is the Bell County East-to-Big Hill project?
Rose is one of hundreds of Texans participating in this week’s hearing, arguing why their land is not an appropriate location for future transmission infrastructure.
“We have 13 minutes to present this whole case (to the administrative judges),” Rose said.
The proposed project spans multiple counties across Texas and is part of a broader effort to expand the state’s electric transmission capacity.
Oncor and LCRA argue they studied dozens of route options to reduce impacts to homes, landowners and environmentally sensitive areas.
Why Texas landowners oppose the transmission routes
Still, opponents argue the process pits neighbors against one another while forcing landowners to spend significant money trying to protect their property.
“All of these groups and all of these landowners are going to spend, I mean, collectively, millions of dollars easily, over this next week in legal fees,” said Mia Sarot, founder of the Hill Country Land and Legacy Alliance, an advocacy group representing landowners across Central Texas.
She also argued the state’s timeline for approving transmission projects compresses the process too aggressively.
How the PUC hearing process works
Under state law, the Public Utility Commission has 180 days from the initial filing to complete the transmission line approval process.
According to Sarot, landowners have about 30 days to intervene in the case, followed by roughly 90 days of review by administrative law judges and about 30 days for PUC commissioners to make final decisions.
“The decisions are made faster than they can really meaningfully have input because you have to understand the project,” Sarot said.
When Texas regulators could make a decision
Following the hearing, administrative judges are expected to send route recommendations to the PUC.
“It doesn’t mean that the PUC commissioners have to agree with what they do, and they can make a completely different decision,” Sarot said.
Another hearing later this month could further complicate the process. That proceeding will focus on whether additional route alternatives should have been included in the application.
If judges determine the proposed routes were insufficient, portions of the process could be revisited.
“We might then, you know, have to do this again, spend more money. That is very frustrating,” Sarot said.
For Jan Rose and her husband, Austin Rose, the hope is simple. “Our hope is that the PUC will slow this process down,” she said.
As part of the hearing process, Oncor and LCRA are expected to present witnesses discussing why specific routes were selected. Participants are given 13 minutes to cross-examine utility representatives and limited time to present their arguments.
The Public Utility Commission is expected to make a final decision later this year.
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