Slow-moving Hurricane Sally takes aim at Gulf Coast

Gulf Coast residents raced to finish last-minute preparations Monday as Hurricane Sally gained strength as it chugged slowly through warm Gulf waters. Forecasters predicted said the biggest threat is flooding, with as much as two feet of rain falling in some areas.

“The bottom line continues to be that Sally is expected to be a dangerous slow-moving hurricane near the coast of southeastern Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama during the next 2-3 days,” the National Hurricane Center said early Monday.

1 PM CDT 9/14 #Sally Update: Hurricane #Sally continues meandering over the north-central Gulf of Mexico. Additional strengthening is forecast during the next day or so before it makes landfall along the north-central Gulf Coast on Tue or Tue night. https://t.co/tW4KeFW0gB pic.twitter.com/8oPmhptnIV

Sally is perhaps the least welcome guest among lots of company: For only the second time in recorded history, there are five tropical cyclones churning in the Atlantic basin, meteorologist Philip Klotzbach said: Paulette, Rene, Teddy and now Vicky also are spinning over ocean waters.

CBS News weather producer David Parkinson said Sally’s slow speed could mean it will dump more rain than originally forecast.

“The real problem with this storm is its forward speed will be 3-4 mph…it will lumber on to shore, all the while dumping 3-4″ of rain per hour from its bands,” Parkinson said. “It will not clear quickly, either. That means that we could have heavy rain for a 24-hour period beginning Tuesday morning and lasting into Wednesday.” 

In the Old Town neighborhood of Bay St. Louis, Mississippi, Jeremy Burke, who owns the Bay Books bookstore was picking up things from the floor in case of flooding. Outside, he said the picturesque town popular as a weekend getaway from New Orleans, about 60 miles to the west, was nearly empty.

“It’s turning into a ghost town,” he said. “Everybody’s biggest fear is the storm surge, and the worst possible scenario being that it just stalls out. That would be a dicey situation for everybody.”

The National Hurricane Center said it was too early to tell exactly where Sally would come ashore, because it’s still not known when it would make a turn to the north. At 10 a.m. local time, it was about 135 miles east-southeast of the mouth of the Mississippi River. Its top sustained winds were 85 mph and it was moving toward the coast at just 6 mph.

People in New Orleans were watching the storm’s track intently. A more easterly landfall would likely bring the heavier rains and damaging winds onto the Mississippi coast, or east of that. Already outer bands from the storm were hitting the Florida Panhandle.

A more westerly track would pose another test for the low-lying city, where heavy rains have to be pumped out through a century-old drainage system. Officials with the Sewerage and Water Board said Sunday that all of the pumps were in operation ahead of the storm, but the aging system is also susceptible to breakdowns.

Sally is expected to reach shore by early Tuesday, bringing dangerous weather conditions, including risk of flooding, to a region stretching from the western Florida Panhandle to southeast Louisiana.

The Hurricane Center warned of an “extremely dangerous and life-threatening storm surge” for areas outside the levee protection system that protects the greater New Orleans area stretching from Port Fourchon, Louisiana, to the Alabama/Florida border.

“I know for a lot of people this storm seemed to come out of nowhere,” Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards said Sunday. “We need everybody to pay attention to this storm. Let’s take this one seriously.”

It was just a little over two weeks ago when the opposite end of the state was bracing for Hurricane Laura, which blew ashore on August 27 as a Category 4 hurricane in Cameron Parish, which borders Texas. That storm scoured the southwestern Louisiana coast and the city of Lake Charles, ripping houses of roofs and leaving large portions of the city uninhabitable. So far 32 people have died in Texas and Louisiana, the vast majority of them in Louisiana.

Mississippi officials warned that the storm was expected to coincide with high tide, leading to significant storm surge.

Pensacola, on Florida’s Panhandle, was bracing for 10 to 15 inches of rain.

Sally could produce rain totals up to 24 inches by the middle of the week, forecasters said. Its maximum sustained winds Monday morning were near 65 mph.

“That system is forecast to bring not only damaging winds but a dangerous storm surge,” said Daniel Brown of the Hurricane Center. “Because it’s slowing down it could produce a tremendous amount of rainfall over the coming days.”

The entire island of Bermuda, where homes are built to withstand major hurricanes, was inside the eye of Hurricane Paulette on Monday morning. Once a tropical storm, Rene was forecast to become a remnant low Monday. Teddy became a tropical storm Monday morning, and was expected to become a hurricane later in the week, forecasters said. And Tropical Storm Vicky formed east of the Cape Verde islands.

A mandatory evacuation has already been issued in Grand Isle, Louisiana, ahead of Sally. On Saturday, New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell issued a mandatory evacuation order for Orleans Parish residents living outside of the parish’s levee protection system.

All northern Gulf Coast states are urging residents to prepare.

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