Wednesday, September 18, 2019

Houston

Tropical Depression Imelda Hits Houston - The New York Times

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Tropical Depression Imelda Hits Houston

The storm is expected to drop six to 12 inches of rain, and could bring “life-threatening” flooding. Some schools canceled Wednesday classes.

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CreditCreditMark Mulligan/Houston Chronicle, via Associated Press

Tropical Depression Imelda hit Houston on Tuesday evening, bringing heavy rains and warnings of “life-threatening flash flooding,” and prompting some schools to cancel classes.

The National Hurricane Center said that Imelda was expected to dump six to 12 inches as it slowly moved through the region. Up to 18 inches of rain could fall in some pockets, the center said.

“Travel will be hazardous this evening, and flooding in urban, low-lying, and poor drainage areas is anticipated,” the National Weather Service in Houston posted on Twitter on Tuesday afternoon.

At 8 p.m. Tuesday, Imelda was just north of Houston and was moving toward the north at 7 miles per hour. Forecasts project heavy rains through Thursday evening, according to Space City Weather, a Houston weather news website.

The Galveston Independent School District and the Texas City Independent School District said that they had canceled classes on Wednesday. Other Houston-area school districts said that they were monitoring weather forecasts before making decisions to close their doors.

The area is still recovering from the devastation of Hurricane Harvey, which lingered over the city as a tropical storm in August 2017. Heavy rain, high winds and tornadoes leveled entire neighborhoods.

Hundreds of miles to the east, Humberto became a Category 3 hurricane and was expected to wallop Bermuda by Wednesday afternoon with heavy winds, according to the National Hurricane Center.

“Winds are expected to first reach tropical-storm strength by Wednesday afternoon, making outside preparations difficult or dangerous,” the hurricane center said. “Preparations to protect life and property should be rushed to completion.”

Storm surge and heavy waves could bring coastal flooding on Wednesday night along Bermuda’s southern coast, the center said.

Farther southeast of Humberto, the hurricane center said Tropical Depression Ten was strengthening and was expected to become a hurricane when it approaches the Leeward Islands on Thursday night and Friday.

Matthew Sedacca contributed reporting.

Mihir Zaveri covers breaking news from New York. Before joining The Times in 2018 he was a reporter for The Houston Chronicle.

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