A Dangerous Storm Will Affect At Least 30 Million Americans This week

Around 70 million Americans are in the path of a dangerous storm that’s headed toward the United States. According to the National Weather Service’s Storm Prediction Center, the threat zone Monday stretched from the southern Appalachians to New York City.

CNN says a severe thunderstorm watch was in effect Monday evening for portions of eastern Maryland, central and eastern Virginia and central North Carolina. Damaging wind gusts up to 70 mph are the main threat, but hail up to 1.5 inches in diameter and an isolated tornado or two are also possible. The watch is in place until 1 a.m. ET Tuesday.

Read more: Experts Claim Climate Change to Be the Next Unprecedented Crisis for the US?

The rate of rainfall could top 1 inch per hour at times, with several total inches of rainfall expected in some areas, the weather service said.
 
Already, the storm has triggered at least 13 reports of tornadoes Sunday in Missouri, Illinois and Kansas, according to the weather service. The NWS in St. Louis confirmed an EF-3 tornado in Fredericktown, Missouri, and an EF-1 in Chester, Illinois. Damage surveys are ongoing and the results are still preliminary.
 
 
The Storm Prediction Center also issued a statement, saying, “Isolated to scattered severe thunderstorms capable of producing damaging winds and tornadoes are expected today and tonight from far east/southeast Texas into Louisiana and other parts of the Gulf Coast region.
 

“The region will be influenced today by an increasingly moist air mass preceding an eastward-moving full-latitude trough that is centered over the Plains early this morning. Linearly continuous outflow from last night’s storms extends from far eastern Oklahoma southward into east-central/southern Texas where a stronger convective line exists early this morning.

“Other convective-line preceding showers/thunderstorms have increased near the upper Texas coast and coastal southwest Louisiana, some of which have exhibited supercellular characteristics.

For additional short-term details, see Mesoscale Discussion 1911.”

Read more: Hurricane “Ida”: US Gulf Coast Braces for Life Threatening Storm

More concerns rise as Sacramento broke its 24-hour rainfall record, with 5.44 inches of rain reported downtown between 1 a.m. Sunday and 1 a.m. Monday. With 4.02 inches of rain, Sunday also marked the “4th Wettest day EVER in SF with records back to Gold Rush,” the weather service office said.

To keep up with more news, stay updated here with us at the East County Gazette. 

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