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For immediate release
Florida Press Office: Mark Friedlander, 904-806-7813, MarkF@iii.org
ST. JOHNS, Fla., Sept. 9, 2024 — Residents from Texas to the Florida Panhandle should prepare for the potential impacts of Tropical Storm Francine, which is forecast to make landfall along the Northern Gulf Coast on Wednesday, Sept. 11, as a hurricane, according to the Insurance Information Institute (Triple-I).
Francine will be the fourth hurricane of the 2024 Atlantic hurricane season and third landfalling tropical cyclone in the U.S. this year. Hurricane Beryl made landfall as a Category 1 hurricane in Texas on July 8. Debby made landfall as a Category 1 hurricane in Florida on Aug. 5 and made a second landfall as a tropical storm in South Carolina on Aug. 8. It is the first Atlantic named storm to form since Ernesto on Aug. 12.
The National Hurricane Center (NHC) has issued a Hurricane Watch for the Louisiana coast from Cameron to Grand Isle. A Tropical Storm Watch has been issued for other areas of Louisiana, including Baton Rouge, Lake Charles and New Orleans. A Storm Surge Watch has been issued from High Island, Texas to the Mississippi/Alabama border.
“Francine is forecast to slowly intensify today and more rapidly intensify tomorrow as it approaches the Northern Gulf Coast,” Triple-I non-resident scholar Phil Klotzbach, PhD, a senior research scientist in the Department of Atmospheric Science at Colorado State University, said in a brief video update on Monday.
Klotzbach added, “In addition to the wind threat from Francine, storm surge will also be a significant threat. The storm will also be a heavy rainfall producer with estimates of 4-8 inches for the Southern Texas and Far Upper Texas Coast, as well as the Louisiana and Mississippi coastlines with totals up to 12 inches possible.”
In an advisory today, the NHC warned of “the risk of considerable flash flooding” from the Mexico/Texas border to Southern Mississippi into Thursday morning, Sept. 12. The NHC also noted a risk of flash and urban flooding exists across portions of the Mid-South from Wednesday into Friday morning, Sept. 13. Francine is expected to impact areas from the Gulf Coast to the Midwest through this weekend as it tracks northward after making landfall.
Preparedness Tips
The Triple-I offers preparedness tips for all residents in the path of Francine:
Damage caused by hurricanes and tropical storms are covered under different insurance policies, according to the Triple-I:
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