- Pope Leo XIV speaks of flooding in Texas, offers condolences and prayer
- Heavy rains leave at least 5 dead in the Austin region; flood watch extended until 7 pm.
- Eleven campers remain unaccounted for at Kerr County's Camp Mystic amid major floods
- Search efforts continue in Kerr County, where 59 people have been confirmed dead after massive flooding
- Search efforts continue in Kerr County, where 59 people have confirmed dead after massive flooding
Tropical Storm Chantal expected to make landfall overnight in coastal South Carolina

Watch for heavy rain across the Carolina coastlines this weekend, impacting portions of the Charlotte area Sunday.
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Tropical Storm Chantal formed Saturday at 8 a.m., per the National Hurricane Center. It’s currently located about 95 miles south-southeast of Charleston, S.C. and is forecasted to make landfall along the South Carolina coast by Sunday morning.
A Tropical Storm Warning is in effect for South Santee River, S.C. to Surf City, N.C. A Tropical Storm Watch is in place from Edisto Beach, S.C. to South Santee River, SC.
Regardless of development, heavy rain has already begun for portions of the coastal Carolinas and gets heavier and more widespread overnight. Our impacts locally are minimal with highest rain chances from Greensboro and Raleigh toward the beaches.
When
Highest impacts are well to our east across the coastal Carolinas. Chantal is an extremely lopsided system so the worst rain and wind is far from the center.
Center comes onshore overnight with rain in the Charlotte area from late morning through midday. It’s in and out very quickly!
Impacts
- Coastal North Carolina and South Carolina already seeing heavy rain and continues overnight
- Rip current danger will be high throughout Monday for both the North and South Carolina beaches
- Marine conditions are rough and dangerous already with wave heights up to 5-10 feet offshore
- Wind gusts along the Carolina shores could reach 20 – 30 mph
- Locally, watch for heavy rain Sunday before quickly moving out!
What you need to do and know
- Check forecasts daily, especially if you live in the Southeast, especially coastal area
- Be prepared for localized flooding or downpours, mainly near the coast and offshore.
- If you’re boating or at the beach, monitor marine warnings closely!
- Know what different beach flags mean and when it is, and isn’t, safe to swim.