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Severe Memorial Day storms knock out power to more than 100,000 in Texas

Severe Memorial Day storms knock out power to more than 100,000 in Texas

Yahoo27-05-2025

More than 100,000 customers in Texas were without power on Tuesday morning after severe storms pummelled the area.
Earlier Tuesday morning, it was closer to 130,000 customers who did not have power, but the outages have been clearing up throughout the morning, according to PowerOutage.us, a platform that tracks national power outages.
Heavy rain, hail and violent winds over Memorial Day weekend are behind the widespread power outages across the state, particularly in the greater Houston area and nearby counties. PowerOutage.us reports that over 71,000 CenterPoint Energy clients and more than 23,000 Entergy clients were without power as of 10:30 a.m. ET.
Thunderstorms are expected to continue hitting areas throughout southeastern Texas into Louisiana and Mississippi on Tuesday, as severe weather from the holiday weekend continues to move eastward.
The National Weather Service reports that the Storm Prediction Center has issued a Slight Risk level of two out of five for the thunderstorms throughout Texas that will continue into Thursday morning, with frequent lightning, severe wind, hail and potentially a few tornadoes.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott activated state emergency response resources on Monday, telling residents the state was 'ready to deploy all necessary resources to support Texans as severe thunderstorms move across our state.'
'Texans are urged to remain weather-aware, regularly checking road conditions and heed the guidance of state and local officials to ensure the safety of themselves and their loved ones,' Abbott wrote in a news release.
Some Texas residents have captured significant elements from the thunderstorms: An X user in north-central Texas took photos of hail larger than the size of a softball, and in Austin, someone filmed a video of the intense lightning strikes during a storm Monday night.
The Weather Prediction Center has placed southeastern New Mexico, parts of southwestern Texas and areas across Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia on a level two out of five risk for severe thunderstorms through Wednesday. The center also warned some areas in Tennessee, Kentucky and West Virginia could experience flooding from the storms.
The NWS advises residents to be ready to shelter indoors before storms hit and set up multiple ways to receive as many weather warnings as possible.

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Lightning injures 8 in Florida, kills one in different events as summer storms roil the state
Lightning injures 8 in Florida, kills one in different events as summer storms roil the state

Yahoo

time37 minutes ago

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Lightning injures 8 in Florida, kills one in different events as summer storms roil the state

The storm grew along a Gulf Coast breeze, a swelling cumulous cloud with a fog of cold June rain and shivers of lightning sparking toward the white sands of Marco Island. A warning siren wailed and some beachgoers sought cover under the thatch of a tiki hut — one of several at the JW Marriott Beach Resort — and, ultimately, the one where a bolt of electricity hotter than the surface of the sun would strike. Four women were knocked unconscious by the random punch from Mother Nature at about 3:45 p.m. on June 21. They were among 8 people injured and one killed by lightning strikes in Florida during the waning days of June, according to police reports and the National Weather Service. 'It wasn't necessarily severe that day but that goes to show you that any thunderstorm can put out lightning strikes that can hurt someone,' said Miami-based National Weather Service meteorologist Sammy Hadi. 'You may think a tiki hut is a safe location, however, if the lighting hit the tiki hut and the current went into the ground, you can get shocked.' Florida ranks consistently in first or second place as the state with the most lightning deaths per year. Between 2015 and 2024, 50 people were killed in Florida by lightning, compared to second place Texas, where 20 people were killed. This year, Florida has so far had just one death, a 29-year-old Colorado man who was struck June 20 while standing in shallow water at New Smyrna Beach. The man, Jake Rosencranz, was on a delayed honeymoon after getting married in 2023. 'They were visiting our beaches to celebrate their marriage,' Volusia County Sheriff Mike Chitwood posted on social media. 'In one terrifying second everything changed.' Two people were injured on the Venetian Bay golf course the same day Rosencranz was killed. On June 23, there was a lightning injury in Navarre Beach when a man was struck at a restaurant. A person was also taken to the hospital on June 23 after lightning struck a cabana in Holmes Beach where several people were waiting out a storm. More: West Palm Beach taps its emergency groundwater wells as drought continues into rainy season 'The challenge with lightning is it can come from miles away without anyone knowing it,' said Marco Island Police Captain David Ennis, who was about a mile from the beach when the lightning struck June 21. 'I saw the storm coming and when I went inside, it was overcast, it was a dark sky.' Florida's geography makes summer one of the more dangerous seasons meteorologically, with spiking daytime temperatures that trigger invading sea breezes from both coasts of the peninsula. Those breezes force hot air over land to rise. Depending on the conditions higher in the atmosphere, especially if it's particularly cold, ice particles form. Colliding ice transfers electrons and separates electrical charges with negatively charged ice falling toward the bottom of the cloud where it can discharge lightning to Earth. A lightning strike sends an electric pulse searing through the nervous system causing concussion, temporary loss of hearing or eyesight and, sometimes, brain injury. The heart may stop beating entirely or pump erratically. Electricity also travels on top of the skin, causing burns by turning sweat or rain to steam or heating up a belt buckle, for example, to singe exposed skin. 'Florida is certainly the lightning death capital of the country,' said John Jensenius, lightning safety specialist for the National Lightning Safety Council. 'Our recommendation is that you get inside a substantial building that has wiring and plumbing. There is no safe place outside.' Lightning can strike from 10 miles away with a blue sky overhead and tends to hit the highest object in an area. It is not attracted to metal — an enduring myth — although metal is a good conductor of electrical current, which is why lightning rods are used on tall buildings to direct the current into the ground. More: Lightning kills randomly, know myth from fact People can also seek safety in a closed car with a metal roof where if lighting strikes the charge will travel around the outside car and into the tires or ground. Hadi, the meteorologist, was working the afternoon of June 21. The NWS Miami office forecasts for Collier County and he began noticing signs of potential trouble three hours before the lightning strike that injured the four women. The air aloft was cooler that day, meaning more energy could be produced by rising warm air from the surface. The office issued a special weather statement at about 3:30 p.m. as a strong thunderstorm approached Marco Island. A radar loop speckled white with lighting bolts was posted to social media at 3:31 pm, about 14 minutes before the strike. Danielle Sturgill, who was one of the women injured on Marco Island June 21, told CBS affiliate WINK News in Fort Myers that she and her friends went under the tiki hut to get out of the rain. 'The next thing I know, we were all four knocked unconscious. We didn't even know what happened. We didn't hear the boom,' Sturgill said. Three of the women were taken to the hospital with minor injuries. The group, who were visiting from Kentucky, later got tattoos of small lightning bolts on their ankles to commemorate the event. 'They were lucky,' Jensenius said. "Everyone constantly reminds us of how blessed we are, and it's not luck," Sturgill told WINK News. "We're just thankful to God." No place outside is safe when thunderstorms are in the area. Schedule outdoor activities when there are no thunderstorms in the forecast. Check the latest forecast and cancel or postpone activities if thunderstorms are predicted. Monitor weather conditions via radar or lightning app. Keep a watchful eye on the sky. Listen for thunder. Lightning can strike outward 10 miles from a storm. If you hear any thunder, even a distant rumble, you are likely within striking distance of the storm. Head quickly to a safe place at the first signs of a developing or approaching thunderstorm. (A safe place is a fully enclosed substantial building with wiring and plumbing or fully inside a hardtop metal vehicle.) Remain inside the safe place for at least 30 minutes after the last thunder before returning outside. Source: The National Lightning Safety Council Kimberly Miller is a journalist for The Palm Beach Post, part of the USA Today Network of Florida. She covers real estate, weather, and the environment. Subscribe to The Dirt for a weekly real estate roundup. If you have news tips, please send them to kmiller@ Help support our local journalism, subscribe today. This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post: Lightning injures four on Marco Island kills man in New Smyrna Beach

Stormy weather for Palm Beach County on July 4 as hurricane center watches area for development
Stormy weather for Palm Beach County on July 4 as hurricane center watches area for development

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timean hour ago

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Stormy weather for Palm Beach County on July 4 as hurricane center watches area for development

A drooping cool front expected to loiter over Florida is forecast to make for a soggy July 4th holiday and potentially stir a weak tropical cyclone to life. The National Hurricane Center said on June 30 that there was a 20% chance of something tropical or subtropical developing over seven days along the weakening front. But forecast models have wavered in recent days and where the tropical system could form is unclear, possibly over the warm Gulf Stream waters east of the state, over Florida or in the Gulf of Mexico, now renamed as the Gulf of America by the U.S. government. 'There are still some ensembles showing development but it's less than it was a couple of days ago,' said Chris Fisher, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Miami. 'But for us in South Florida, it really doesn't make that much of a difference because there will be plenty of moisture and it's looking like a fairly unsettled weekend.' The NWS has a 30% to 60% chance of rain in South Florida each day through July 3, but that picks up to 70% through the day and evening of July 4 with showers in the morning and thunderstorms possible later in the day. More: Hurricane Season 2025: How the hurricane forecast cone changed this year A south to southwest breeze could keep rainfall pinned to the east coast on Friday with the Weather Prediction Center forecasting up to 4 inches of rain for parts of Palm Beach County into Saturday morning. Still, Fisher said July 4th may not be a total washout. 'It's something we're going to have to monitor as the week goes on,' he said. And while rain could hamper outdoor festivities, Fisher noted that it's sorely needed in Palm Beach County where 20% of the of the county is still in extreme drought and 55% is in moderate drought, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. Palm Beach County is the only area in Florida where there is extreme drought. Rainfall as measured at Palm Beach International Airport in West Palm Beach was 13.4 inches below normal for the year through June 29, making it the 6th driest year in 126 years of records. July usually is the driest rainy season month for South Florida — just 5.6 inches of rain is normal for West Palm Beach compared to 8.5 inches in June — as Saharan dust plumes increasingly make their way across the Atlantic Ocean to dry out middle portions of the atmosphere. Alex DaSilva, lead hurricane forecaster for AccuWeather, said a layer of Saharan air combined with cyclone-killing wind shear will keep anything tropical that forms along the stalled front on the weaker side. More: Lightning injures 8 in Florida, kills one in different events as summer storms roil the state 'I'm thinking it won't blow up into a hurricane or anything massive,' DaSilva said. 'The rain would probably be the primary factor in whatever develops at the current time.' If a tropical or subtropical storm forms, it would be named Chantal, and would follow the short-lived Tropical Storm Andrea, that formed east of Bermuda on June 24, and Tropical Storm Barry, which was named June 29 but quickly fizzled after making landfall in Mexico as a tropical depression. Andrea and Barry put this season so far above average as far as the number of named storms. The typical second named storm doesn't form until July 17 with the third named storm forming, on average, on August 3. 'Out in the Atlantic, it looks really quiet,' DaSilva said referring to tropical development in the main runway between Africa and the Caribbean. 'There's a lot of dust, a lot of shear and a lot of cool water off Africa.' Kimberly Miller is a journalist for The Palm Beach Post, part of the USA Today Network of Florida. She covers real estate, weather, and the environment. Subscribe to The Dirt for a weekly real estate roundup. If you have news tips, please send them to kmiller@ Help support our local journalism, subscribe today. This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post: National Hurricane Center watching area near Florida for tropical development

Family of 11 rescued on closed South Mountain trail due to heat
Family of 11 rescued on closed South Mountain trail due to heat

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