Hurricane Laura Makes Landfall Near Texas-Louisiana Border As Category 4 Storm

By Published on August 27, 2020

Hurricane Laura made landfall early Thursday, hitting the Texas-Louisiana border as a Category 4 storm.

Laura sustained winds reaching 140 mph and brought with it a coming storm surge that the National Hurricane Center described as “unsurvivable.” The storm intensified at an alarming speed, jumping from a Category 1 storm to a Category 4 storm in less than 48 hours, The Washington Post reported.

Parts of Louisiana prepared for a storm surge up to 20 feet above the ground and reaching 40 miles inland, prompting parts of I-10, the state’s main freeway, to close, NOLA.com reported. The surge is expected to affect more than 400 miles of the Gulf Coast, extending from Freeport, Texas past the Mississippi River delta.

Ahead of Laura’s landfall, state and local officials urged residents to evacuate further inland to avoid the worst of the storm. Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards activated the state’s entire National Guard to help with the response, The Washington Post reported.

“If you decide to stay, you’re on your own,” said Thurman Bartie, the Mayor of Port Arthur, a coastal town on the Texas-Louisiana border, the Associated Press reported.

His comments were echoed by meteorologists stationed throughout both states.

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“Your life will be in immediate and grave danger if you do not evacuate,” Donald Jones, a meteorologist for the NWS stationed in Lake Charles, Louisiana, told AP.

In Texas, thousands of residents in the storm’s path evacuated Wednesday. In Galveston, a coastal city close to the state’s Louisiana border, the mayor issued a mandatory evacuation order Tuesday, The New York Times reported.

Laura is not only expected to leave much of Louisiana without power, but may lead to outages as far inland as Memphis, according to the Weather Channel’s forecast.

Heavy rain is expected to hit as far north as Indiana and Ohio as the storm is predicted to move north before cutting east towards the Atlantic Ocean, the forecast shows. Laura is so powerful that there is a chance that it will redevelop back into a tropical depression once back over the ocean, AP reported.

The storm has already killed nearly two dozen people on Hispaniola, leaving much of the island without power and working to mitigate the damage caused by flash floods. The storm stuck the Gulf Coast only days before the 15th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, which breached New Orleans’ levees and killed approximately 1,800 people.

 

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