Tropical Storm Henri expected to soon become hurricane hundreds of miles off North Carolina coast

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RALEIGH, N.C. — Tropical Storm Henri is strengthening as it churns about 500 miles east of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina.

The National Hurricane Center clocked Henri’s top sustained winds at 70 miles per hour. The system is moving toward the Tar Heel state at 9 miles per hour.

Henri is expected to become a hurricane later today or Friday. That’s when it will also make a turn to the north and northeast, keeping it far off the North Carolina coast.

Rain and wind from Henri will not arrive in North Carolina, but the storm will cause moderate to high rip currents along the coast.

Grace

Hurricane Grace is bashing the Yucatan Peninsula on Thursday morning.

Grace has maximum sustained winds of 80 miles per hour and is moving west at 17 miles per hour.

Grace will dump a lot of rain on the Yucatan Peninsula, causing flooding and dangerous storm surge. Grace might also cause dangerous mudslides.

The storm will weaken as it moves over land, but then when it gets back into the Gulf of Mexico, it could re-strengthen before making another landfall around Veracruz.

Fred

Tropical Depression Fred blew into the northeastern U.S. on Wednesday, unleashing heavy rains and threatening to cause mudslides and flash floods in upstate New York after closing highways in the lower Appalachians. Dozens of people were rescued from flooded areas in North Carolina after downpours washed out bridges and swamped homes.

Unconfirmed tornados unleashed by the stormy weather already caused damage in places in Georgia and North Carolina on Tuesday as Fred moved north, well inland from the coastal areas that usually bear the brunt of tropical weather. One death was reported in Florida, where authorities said a driver hydroplaned and flipped into a ditch near Panama City.

About 37,000 customers were without power Wednesday in North Carolina and West Virginia, according to the utility tracker poweroutage.us. In North Carolina, where steady downpours swelled waterways and washed rocks and mud onto highways, multiple landslides temporarily closed several lanes on Interstate 40 and closed another highway Tuesday.

Fred’s remnants moved into Pennsylvania by midday Wednesday, and although the post-tropical cyclone no longer had much of a swirling center, it was still capable of spawning tornadoes and other dangerous weather. Rich Otto, a National Weather Service meteorologist, said rainfall is forecast to range from 2-4 inches (5-10 centimeters), with some some spots of 6 inches (16 centimeters), across a swathe from Pennsylvania to New England through Friday.

“The bigger threat is probably just the chances of flooding and widespread flood watches that are in effect right now,” he said.

Schools were closed and people evacuated along three rain-swollen rivers in far eastern Tennessee. “The areas around the Pigeon, French Broad and Nolichucky Rivers have become unsafe,” Cocke County Mayor Crystal Ottinger said in an order posted to Facebook late Tuesday. Four shelters opened.

Schools in Lincoln County, West Virginia also canceled classes Wednesday due to high water from heavy rains.

In North Carolina, Gov. Roy Cooper said Wednesday he had declared a state of emergency and approximately 100 people had been rescued during the flooding in the state’s mountains. There were at least 70 water rescue efforts in Buncombe County, spokesperson Lillian Govus said, and 911 call records show 2,400 calls within 24 hours, more than twice the typical volume.

Authorities also found at least 10 cars abandoned in flooded roads where people apparently sought safety and had to leave their cars behind, said Taylor Jones, the county’s emergency services director. The town of Candler saw significant flooding, with impassible roads and two washed-out bridges preventing dozens of people from leaving their houses. No deaths or injuries were immediately reported.

To the west in the Canton area, a rescue team from the eastern part of the state performed water rescues of 15 adults, two children and several pets in the Canton area, New Hanover County Fire Rescue Chief Rudolph Shackelford said in a statement. Photos posted by the team showed rescue personnel in bright yellow vests staging rafts with outboard motors at the edge of yards that were submerged with muddy water up to the front doors of multiple homes. They also helped evacuate several apartment buildings threatened by floodwaters.

Canton Mayor Zeb Smathers said the hours of inundation Tuesday “created a major disaster area” in his town.

“What really caught us by surprise was how quickly the water rose, the tremendous amount, and intensity of it,” Smathers said by phone.

Copyright © 2021 ABC11-WTVD-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved – The Associated Press contributed to this report.