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CBS News
40 minutes ago
- CBS News
Warmer with Storms Developing on Sunday in Maryland
Happy Sunday, everyone! It'll be a warm and humid day with highs for more neighborhoods getting into the 90s. Within Baltimore City limits, we could see a few neighborhoods peaking in the upper 90s. Feels like temperatures or heat index values will rise to near 100° and some areas may feel like over 100°. As a cold front approaches from the north, showers and storms are expected to develop during the second part of today. A line of showers and storms moves through this evening and tonight. A level 1 of 5 risk is in place for much of Maryland as a couple of storms could produce severe level damaging winds. Since we have so much moisture in the atmosphere, there's a higher chance for showers to produce heavier downpours. Storms move in after 6 or 7 pm in western parts of the state and appear to reach I-95 around 9 pm tonight. The line of storms continues moving south and east through the state before clearing the Lower Eastern Shore by early Monday morning. Monday brings its own chance for showers, although the risk appears lower and no threat for stronger storms. Humidity remains high to start the week. Temperatures, however, will be cooler. We could see high temperatures Monday nearly 10° cooler vs Sunday's afternoon high temperatures. Another round of showers comes on Tuesday. Over the course of the next week, humidity will slowly try to decrease. We're anticipating much more comfortable conditions by later this week as a break in the humidity builds in over the next few days. Drier weather also moves in starting around midweek. Hurricane Erin's center moved north of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands late Saturday and on Sunday. Thanks to the cold front firing off our Sunday storms, Erin will stay out to sea. The front will stop Erin from continuing it's north-westward movement, causing the storm to eventually move away from the US Mainland. Just because the storm won't make a U.S. landfall doesn't mean we won't have impacts. Erin will still churn up rough surf and dangerous rip currents along the East Coast for a few days as it moves offshore around the middle of the week.
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Downgraded Hurricane Erin lashes Caribbean with rain
Offshore Hurricane Erin was downgraded to a Category 3 storm early Sunday, as rain lashed Caribbean islands and weather officials warned of possible flash floods and landslides. The first hurricane of what is expected to be a particularly intense Atlantic season, Erin briefly strengthened into a "catastrophic" Category 5 storm before its windspeeds weakened. It is expected to lash several Caribbean islands with heavy rain and strong winds but not make landfall. Hurricane Erin was located about 140 miles (225 kilometers) north of San Juan, Puerto Rico, at 0600 GMT, when it was gauged as a Category 3 storm with maximum sustained winds of 125 miles (205 kilometers) per hour, according to the Miami-based National Hurricane Center (NHC). "The core of Erin is expected to pass to the east of the Turks and Caicos Islands and the southeastern Bahamas tonight and Monday," the NHC said in its latest report, noting that it anticipated additional fluctuations in the storm's intensity. A tropical storm watch was in effect for Turks and Caicos Islands, while the Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico and the southeast and central Bahamas were advised to monitor its progress. Hurricane Erin had reached the highest level on the Saffir-Simpson scale just over 24 hours after becoming a Category 1 storm, a rapid intensification that scientists say has become more common due to global warming. It could drench isolated areas with as much as eight inches (20 centimeters) of rain, the NHC said. "Fluctuations in intensity are expected over the next day or two due to inner-core structural changes. Erin is becoming a larger system," the agency said. It also warned of "locally considerable flash and urban flooding, along with landslides or mudslides." - Climate hazard - In Luquillo, a coastal town of Puerto Rico, surfers rode the swells while beachgoers milled about the shore on an overcast Saturday before the storm approached, AFP images show. Swells generated by Erin will affect portions of the northern Leeward Islands, Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, Hispaniola and the Turks and Caicos Islands during the next couple of days. Those swells will spread to the Bahamas, Bermuda and the US East Coast early next week, creating "life-threatening surf and rip currents," the NHC said. While meteorologists have expressed confidence that Erin will remain well off the US coastline, they said the storm could still cause dangerous waves and erosion in places such as North Carolina. The Atlantic hurricane season, which runs from June until late November, is expected to be more intense than normal, US meteorologists predict. Several powerful storms wreaked havoc in the region last year, including Hurricane Helene, which killed more than 200 people in the southeastern United States. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration -- which operates the NHC -- has been subject to budget cuts and layoffs as part of US President Donald Trump's plans to greatly reduce the size of the federal bureaucracy, leading to fears of lapses in storm forecasting. Human-driven climate change -- namely, rising sea temperatures caused by the burning of fossil fuels -- has increased both the possibility of the development of more intense storms and their more rapid intensification, scientists say. bur-mlm/lb/pbt
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Downgraded Hurricane Erin lashes Caribbean with rain
Offshore Hurricane Erin was downgraded to a Category 3 storm early Sunday, as rain lashed Caribbean islands and weather officials warned of possible flash floods and landslides. The first hurricane of what is expected to be a particularly intense Atlantic season, Erin briefly strengthened into a "catastrophic" Category 5 storm before its windspeeds weakened. It is expected to lash several Caribbean islands with heavy rain and strong winds but not make landfall. Hurricane Erin was located about 140 miles (225 kilometers) north of San Juan, Puerto Rico, at 0600 GMT, when it was gauged as a Category 3 storm with maximum sustained winds of 125 miles (205 kilometers) per hour, according to the Miami-based National Hurricane Center (NHC). "The core of Erin is expected to pass to the east of the Turks and Caicos Islands and the southeastern Bahamas tonight and Monday," the NHC said in its latest report, noting that it anticipated additional fluctuations in the storm's intensity. A tropical storm watch was in effect for Turks and Caicos Islands, while the Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico and the southeast and central Bahamas were advised to monitor its progress. Hurricane Erin had reached the highest level on the Saffir-Simpson scale just over 24 hours after becoming a Category 1 storm, a rapid intensification that scientists say has become more common due to global warming. It could drench isolated areas with as much as eight inches (20 centimeters) of rain, the NHC said. "Fluctuations in intensity are expected over the next day or two due to inner-core structural changes. Erin is becoming a larger system," the agency said. It also warned of "locally considerable flash and urban flooding, along with landslides or mudslides." - Climate hazard - In Luquillo, a coastal town of Puerto Rico, surfers rode the swells while beachgoers milled about the shore on an overcast Saturday before the storm approached, AFP images show. Swells generated by Erin will affect portions of the northern Leeward Islands, Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, Hispaniola and the Turks and Caicos Islands during the next couple of days. Those swells will spread to the Bahamas, Bermuda and the US East Coast early next week, creating "life-threatening surf and rip currents," the NHC said. While meteorologists have expressed confidence that Erin will remain well off the US coastline, they said the storm could still cause dangerous waves and erosion in places such as North Carolina. The Atlantic hurricane season, which runs from June until late November, is expected to be more intense than normal, US meteorologists predict. Several powerful storms wreaked havoc in the region last year, including Hurricane Helene, which killed more than 200 people in the southeastern United States. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration -- which operates the NHC -- has been subject to budget cuts and layoffs as part of US President Donald Trump's plans to greatly reduce the size of the federal bureaucracy, leading to fears of lapses in storm forecasting. Human-driven climate change -- namely, rising sea temperatures caused by the burning of fossil fuels -- has increased both the possibility of the development of more intense storms and their more rapid intensification, scientists say. bur-mlm/lb/pbt