South-Carolina
Will potential tropical cyclone affect South Carolina, Greenville? What to know.
A tropical storm is likely to make landfall on Florida’s Gulf Coast
The tropical rainstorm causing flooding in Puerto Rico right now is expected to strengthen into a tropical storm before hitting Florida.
A developing tropical storm currently passing over Cuba may impact parts of South Carolina and North Carolina by the middle of next week. The storm could bring heavy precipitation, rough surf and other impacts to these regions.
At 11 a.m. Friday, the National Hurricane Center issued its first advisory for “potential tropical cyclone four.” In the update, the tropical depression was shown over Cuba, with the long-term path of the storm moving into the Gulf of Mexico before swinging back over Florida and into the Atlantic.
The cone of uncertainty, which shows the storm’s probable path, includes much of SC. However, many variables remain, including the strength of the still-developing storm and its exact eventual path.
If the system strengthens into a tropical storm as currently predicted, its name would be Debby, the fourth named storm of the season.
More: What is heat index? Friday’s could be 105. How humidity, dew point can affect our bodies
What are the chances for development?
As of late Friday morning the depression was about 420 miles southeast of Key West.
“A Tropical Storm Warning is now in effect for the southwest coast of the Florida peninsula from East Cape Sable to Bonita Beach,” stated the hurricane center’s 11 a.m. advisory. “A Tropical Storm Watch is now in effect for the Florida Keys south of the Card Sound Bridge including the Dry Tortugas, the southern coast of the Florida peninsula east of East Cape Sable to the Card Sound bridge, and for the west coast of the Florida peninsula north of Bonita Beach to Aripeka.”
According to the hurricane center, the depression could grow into a tropical storm by late Saturday as it passed over the Florida Keys.
More: When is first day of fall? SC’s weather forecast by Old Farmer’s Almanac; is it accurate?
What can we expect in the Greenville area?
Weather for the upcoming week is highly dependent on the development of the tropical storm. How quickly the steering winds push the storm north-northeast up toward Florida’s panhandle and back over land will determine the severity of associated weather.
The hurricane center’s update currently has the system passing over northern Florida late Sunday and reentering the Atlantic on Monday morning. Then, predictions show the storm hugging the coast as it moves up the Eastern Seaboard toward the Carolinas. Again, many variables can impact where the system will move.
Currently, NOAA forecasts for the weekend are showing high temperatures in the 90s with overnight showers and thunderstorms predicted. No high winds are forecasted so far.
More: Heat wave continues, cooling stations open in Spartanburg County. What about Greenville?
Where is Potential Tropical Cyclone Four?
Track it: South Carolina Storm Tracker and Model Mixer
Conditions around noon Aug. 2
- Location: 90 miles east-southeast of Camaguey, Cuba; 420 miles southeast of Key West
- Maximum sustained winds: 30 mph
- Movement: west-northwest at 16 mph
More: Heat advisory in effect for Greenville, Spartanburg and Anderson, precautions to stay cool
Are you prepared for a hurricane?
Hurricane season runs from June 1 to Nov. 30. Even if this system won’t pose a threat to the S.C. coast, it’s never too early to be prepared.
Cheryl McCloud, USA TODAY NETWORK – Florida, contributed to this report.
Iris Seaton is the trending news reporter for the Asheville Citizen Times, part of the USA TODAY Network. Reach her at iseaton@citizentimes.com.
South-Carolina
South Carolina’s near-total abortion ban fails to advance out of subcommittee
COLUMBIA, S.C. (WCIV) — The State Senate Medical Affairs subcommittee continued discussions about Senate Bill 323 – a proposed near-total abortion ban.
The controversial bill creates new definitions for human life, contraception and makes abortion a felony. The bill also removes current exceptions for rape, incest and fatal fetal anomaly written into the state’s six-week ban.
On Tuesday, a motion to send a favorable report on Senate Bill 323 to the full medical affairs committee failed 3-2, with four members abstaining.
READ MORE | “SC looks at most restrictive abortion bill in the US as opponents keep pushing limits.”
The motion came after three hours of discussion of possible amendments to the bill. Some proposals sought to remove criminal and civil protections for pregnant mothers, or return to state law that took precedent before Roe v. Wade became precedent in the 1970s.
Those amendments failed to pass.
The bill’s author, State Sen. Richard Cash, chairman of the Medical Affairs Subcommittee, defended the bill as written – claiming abortion is the number one issue in the state.
“I believe it’s our first duty as elected officials to bring an end to it, to protect innocent human life, life, liberty, property,” Cash said. “The rights are in that order. It is our duty to protect innocent life.”
READ MORE | “Second hearing scheduled regarding SC’s controversial near-total abortion ban bill.”
State Sen. Billy Garrett, one of the bill’s original sponsors, abstained. At one point in the meeting, he said he wants to protect the unborn. However, he was against criminalizing mothers.
“I’m extremely in favor of saving babies’ lives,” Garrett said. “I’ll always be that way. My constituents are that way. They asked me to be that way, and I am, but I have never intended, nor should any of us ever intend to, to punish or be punitive towards our moms.”
Sen. Tom Fernandez and Sen. Cash voted in support of the bill. Sens. Deon Tedder, Ronnie Saab and Brad Hutto voted against it. Sens. Garrett, Matt Leber, Thomas Corbin and Jeff Zell abstained.
“This is an enormous victory for reproductive freedom and for the people of South Carolina,” said Dr. Amalia Luxardo, CEO of the Women’s Rights and Empowerment Network (WREN). “This outcome was made possible because thousands of South Carolinians stood up, spoke out, and refused to allow their rights and their futures to be stripped away.”
South-Carolina
Group of South Carolina lawmakers look at the most restrictive abortion bill in the US
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — A bill that would allow judges to sentence women who get abortions to decades in prison and could restrict the use of IUDs and in vitro fertilization goes before a small group of South Carolina senators Tuesday.
This would be the first of at least a half-dozen legislative steps for the proposal that includes the strictest abortion prohibitions and punishments in the nation.
The subcommittee of the state Senate’s Medical Affairs Committee can change it Tuesday afternoon and even if it’s approved, its prospects are doubtful at best.
But even at this stage, the bill has gone further than any other such proposal across the U.S. since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022, opening the door for states to implement abortion bans.
The proposal would ban all abortions unless the woman’s life is threatened. Current state law bans abortions after cardiac activity is detected, which is typically six week into a pregnancy, before many women know they are pregnant. Current law also allows abortions for rape and incest victims up to 12 weeks.
The proposal would also do things that aren’t being done in any other state. Women who get an abortion and anyone who helps them could face up to 30 years in prison. It appears to ban any contraception that prevents a fertilized egg from implanting, which would ban intrauterine devices and could limit in vitro fertilization.
Providing information about abortions would be illegal, leaving doctors worried they couldn’t suggest places where the procedure is legal.
Republican Sen. Richard Cash, who sponsors the bill and is one of the Senate’s most strident voices against abortion, will run Tuesday’s subcommittee. He acknowledged problems last month with potentially banning contraception and restricting the advice doctors can give to patients. But he has given no indication what changes he or the rest of the subcommittee might support. Six of the nine members are Republicans.
Abortion remains an unsettled issue in conservative states and how much more to restrict it is fracturing anti-abortion groups.
South Carolina Citizens for Life, one of the state’s largest and oldest opponents of abortion, issued a statement last month saying it can’t support Cash’s bill because women who get abortions are victims too and shouldn’t be punished.
On the other side, at least for this bill, are groups like Equal Protection South Carolina. “Abortion is murder and should be treated as such,” founder Mark Corral said.
South-Carolina
The ugly numbers behind South Carolina football’s second-half collapse vs Texas A&M
For one half at Kyle Field in College Station, Texas, on Nov. 15, South Carolina football looked unstoppable.
The Gamecocks (3-7, 1-7 SEC) took a 27-point lead over the No. 3 Aggies (10-0, 7-0) into halftime, the largest deficit Texas A&M had faced all season.
Everything had gone right, from Nick Barrett’s scoop-and-score to Nyck Harbor’s 80-yard touchdown reception to LaNorris Sellers’ 183 yards and two touchdown passes.
But the South Carolina team that showed up in the first half was not there for the second half. And the Texas A&M team that came out after halftime is the one that looked like a national championship contender.
Before the Gamecocks knew what happened, the Aggies were walking off their home field with a 31-30 win for the biggest comeback in Texas A&M history.
“I don’t know why we’re going through it,” South Carolina coach Shane Beamer said. “I don’t know why we’ve had this heartbreak that we’ve had, but we will be better and stronger and hardened because of it as we go into next season.”
South Carolina lived up to preseason ranking for a half
For the first half, the Gamecocks looked like the team that had been ranked No. 13 in the preseason. Sellers performed like a projected first-round NFL Draft pick, dicing up the Aggies’ defense.
The Gamecocks intercepted Texas A&M quarterback Marcel Reed twice. Dylan Stewart and Barrett combined for a forced fumble and a scoop-and-score touchdown.
“I know the rest of the country was surprised with what was going on in the first half,” Beamer said. “We weren’t.”
But the Aggies looked even better after the break than the Gamecocks did before it.
Texas A&M scored on four consecutive drives in the second half, erasing the 30-3 deficit with 11 minutes to go in the game. Reed played like a Heisman candidate. After 141 first-half passing yards and two interceptions, Reed had 298 passing yards and two touchdowns in the second.
“Give credit to A&M,” Beamer said. “They did what championship teams do.”
South Carolina vs Texas A&M stats comparison
South Carolina outgained Texas A&M 312-132 in the first half, including holding Texas A&M to minus-9 rushing yards. South Carolina gained more yards in the first half than its season average of 294.1, which is the worst in the SEC and 127th nationally.
The offensive line didn’t give up a sack – a big deal for LaNorris Sellers, who has been sacked more than any other quarterback in FBS.
It was the opposite in the second half. The Aggies had 371 yards to the Gamecocks’ 76, tallying four sacks as it held South Carolina scoreless.
The Gamecocks had a chance to set up a field goal on one final drive. After Texas A&M fumbled near the goal line, South Carolina had 3:10 remaining to drive down the field.
After a second-and-1 at the South Carolina 40 yard line, Sellers got sacked twice in a row before scrambling for 7 yards on fourth-and-long, ending South Carolina’s upset hopes.
With their seventh loss, the Gamecocks are eliminated from bowl eligibility for the second time in three years. There are two games still left on the schedule, including the season finale against rival Clemson Nov. 29.
“There’s a lot of guys on this team that love being a Gamecock,” Beamer said. “There’s a lot of guys on this team and in this program that hurt like hell right now about what we’re going through, but there’s a lot of guys who have great grit and resolve to get this right.”
Evan Gerike is the high school sports reporter for the Asheville Citizen Times. Email him at egerike@citizentimes.com or follow him on X, formerly Twitter, @EvanGerike.
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