2006 season’s first storm named
Published 9:00 pm Sunday, June 11, 2006
TAMPA, Fla. – Most of Florida’s west coast was under a tropical storm watch Sunday as the first named storm of the 2006 Atlantic hurricane season spun over the Gulf of Mexico, threatening to bring heavy rain in the next few days.
By midday, Tropical Storm Alberto had maximum sustained wind near 45 mph, up 10 mph from early in the morning, but it was not likely to grow into a hurricane, the National Hurricane Center said.
“We do not have any significant changes,” said Lixion Avila, a senior hurricane specialist. “The system remains poorly organized.”
Alberto is a lopsided tropical storm with the most intense wind and rains massed on the eastern edge of the system, Avila said. The first of the storm’s rains swept across the Florida peninsula Sunday with no major reports of damage.
Forecasters said that 30 inches of rain could fall over the western half of Cuba, creating a threat of flash floods and mudslides, and that 8 inches could fall over the Florida Keys and the state’s Gulf Coast.
The storm was not expected to cross the Keys, but some tourists were not taking any chances on the low-lying islands.
“I had a bunch of people check out this morning,” said Nikki LaMarca, front desk manager at Courtney’s Place in Key West. “It’s amazing. People are actually leaving.”
Late Sunday, Alberto was moving north northeast at about 8 mph, and has begun to turn northeastward in the direction of central or northern Florida, where it could make landfall early Tuesday, forecasters said.
