Tropical Storm Colin Gains Strength as It Nears Florida

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) —
This NOAA satellite image taken Monday, June 6, 2016 at 12:45 a.m. EDT shows Tropical Storm Colin continuing to move due north over eastern portions of the Gulf of Mexico. Some of the outer rain bands have also begun moving over the western Florida shoreline as the tropical storm continues to move northward. An extended area of clouds is observed stretching from a low pressure system over southern Quebec over much of the eastern seaboard and connecting to Colin. Much of the central United States remains cloud-free with high pressure dominating. (NOAA/Weather Underground via AP)
This NOAA satellite image taken Monday, at 12:45 a.m. EDT shows Tropical Storm Colin continuing to move due north over eastern portions of the Gulf of Mexico. (NOAA/Weather Underground via AP)

Tropical Storm Colin was gaining speed and strength Monday on its way to strike Florida, threatening rains forecasters said could cause some serious flooding along much of the state’s Gulf coast.

A large portion of Florida’s western and Panhandle coast was already under a tropical storm warning when the National Hurricane Center announced that a quickly moving depression had become a named storm. The center said it is the earliest in the season that a third named storm has ever formed in the Atlantic basin.

Colin’s maximum sustained winds Monday morning had increased to near 50 mph with some slow strengthening possible during the next two days. The storm was centered about 360 miles west-southwest of Tampa and moving north-northeast near 14 mph.

Tropical storms carry wind speeds of between 39 mph and 73 mph.

“It’s going to impact most of the state in some way,” Gov. Rick Scott said in a phone interview. “Hopefully we won’t have any significant issues here, but we can have some storm surge, some rain, tornadoes and some flooding.”

The latest forecast for Colin called for the storm to make landfall near the Big Bend area of Florida, move across the Florida peninsula into Georgia and then move along or just off the South Carolina coast before heading out to sea.

Colin is expected to produce rainfall amounts of 3 to 5 inches and forecasters said up to 8 inches possible across western Florida, eastern Georgia, and coastal areas of the Carolinas through Tuesday.

A tropical storm watch was issued for the lower South Carolina coast. The watch was in effect from near McClellanville southwest along the coast to near Brunswick, Georgia.

A watch means that tropical storm conditions are possible in the watch area in the next 36 to 48 hours.

Scott postponed a political meeting with presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump scheduled Monday in New York so he can remain in the state capital to monitor the weather.

It is the latest in a series of severe whether events across the country, from record-breaking heat in the West, flooding in Texas and storms that are expected to cause problems in the nation’s capital and mid-Atlantic region.

Scott warned residents not to simply look at the center of the storm, saying the heaviest rain will be to the east and west of it.

The National Weather Service in Mobile, Alabama, issued a flood warning for the Shoal River near Crestview and warned of possible widespread flooding in streams, creeks, and canals. Wind gusts threatened to bring down trees and branches and cause power outages.

The Georgia coast and the north Florida Atlantic coast were placed under a tropical storm watch Sunday evening.

Sand bags were being distributed to residents in St. Petersburg, Tampa and nearby cities.

To Read The Full Story

Are you already a subscriber?
Click to log in!