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Texas Prepares for Hurricane Beryl’s Impact

Evacuation orders and hurricane warnings and watches were in place for parts of Texas on Sunday as Tropical Storm Beryl approached the state’s shores on the Gulf of Mexico after flattening islands and killing at least 12 people in Grenada, Jamaica and Venezuela days earlier.

The storm made landfall on Friday in Mexico as a Category 2 hurricane. Beryl, which then weakened to a tropical storm, was expected to become a hurricane before reaching the Texas coast as soon as late Sunday.

Hurricane warnings were in effect for the Texas coast, from Baffin Bay, about 40 miles south of Corpus Christi, north toward Sargent, about 160 miles up the shoreline from the bay.

On Saturday afternoon, the Office of Emergency Management for Refugio County, Texas, a shoreline area with a population of about 6,600, issued a mandatory evacuation order. Port Aransas, a city about 20 miles east of Corpus Christi, ordered visitors to leave.

Dan Patrick, who is serving as acting governor of Texas while Gov. Greg Abbott travels abroad, on Saturday added 81 counties to the state’s Hurricane Beryl Disaster Declaration, bringing the total number of counties under the declaration to 121.

The declaration, which enables state resources to assist in local preparation and recovery efforts, is commonly made after an extreme event but can be made if a disaster is imminent.

Forecasters predicted that Beryl would hit Mexico twice. It crossed the Yucatán Peninsula on Friday, and then, after traversing the Gulf of Mexico over the weekend, it was expected to reach the coast of the northern state of Tamaulipas, where a hurricane watch was in effect.

Michael Brennan, director of the National Hurricane Center in Miami, said Saturday that when the hurricane makes landfall in Texas it could bring storm surge of up to five feet above ground level off the Gulf of Mexico in Matagorda Bay, where Matagorda County officials issued a voluntary evacuation order late on Friday.

A sea wall built in 1903 would do little to protect Galveston Island from sea surge, Judge Mark Henry, Galveston County’s top executive, said on Saturday.

“That’s the only protection at this moment, and it’s obviously not much,” he said. “We’re anticipating some potential coastal flooding, and there’s not a lot we can do to stop it or prepare for it, we just have to respond to it as it happens.”

Farther south, officials in the Rio Grande Valley and Corpus Christi were distributing thousands of sandbags to help people prepare for potential flooding.

In Mexico, no injuries, deaths or major flooding had been reported as of Friday evening, Laura Velázquez Alzúa, Mexico’s coordinator of civil protection, said at a news conference.

The storm had dumped six to 10 inches of rain in Campeche, Quintana Roo and Yucatán by early Friday, bringing wind gusts as high as 135 m.p.h. In Quintana Roo, power had been restored to most areas on Saturday after outages affected 20 percent of the population.

Earlier in the week, at least 12 people were killed as the storm lashed parts of Grenada, Venezuela, then Jamaica and the Cayman Islands.

Beryl made landfall on Monday in Grenada, where officials said about 98 percent of the buildings on Carriacou and Petite Martinique, home to 9,000 to 10,000 people in total, had been damaged or destroyed, including Carriacou’s main health facility.

Beryl killed three people and destroyed 400 homes in Venezuela, President Nicolás Maduro said at a news conference on Thursday. The storm left flooded towns, homes engulfed in landslides and damaged schools and bridges, he said at another news conference.

In Jamaica, the storm was the strongest to approach the island in over a decade. About 40 percent of the customers of the country’s main power provider were without electricity on Saturday, the company said.

Forecasters have warned that the 2024 Atlantic hurricane season could be much more active than usual.

In late May, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predicted 17 to 25 named storms this year, an “above-normal” number and a prediction in line with more than a dozen forecasts earlier in the year from experts at universities, private companies and government agencies. Hurricane seasons produce 14 named storms, on average.

Derrick Bryson Taylor, Kenton X. Chance, Johnny Diaz, Daphne Ewing-Chow, Sharefil Gaillard, Julius Gittens, Christine Hauser, Ricardo Hernández Ruiz, Mike Ives, Jesus Jiménez, Jovan Johnson, John Keefe, Emmett Lindner, Orlando Mayorquín, Claire Moses, Derek M. Norman, Aimee Ortiz, Emiliano Rodríguez Mega, Edgar Sandoval, Emily Schmall, Linda Straker, Remy Tumin, John Yoon and Yan Zhuang contributed reporting.

Summary:
Evacuation orders and hurricane warnings are in place for parts of Texas as Tropical Storm Beryl, which has already caused significant damage and fatalities in Grenada, Jamaica, and Venezuela, approaches the Gulf Coast. After initially making landfall in Mexico as a Category 2 hurricane, Beryl weakened to a tropical storm but is expected to regain hurricane strength before reaching Texas. Texas has issued a disaster declaration for 121 counties, enabling state resources for preparation and recovery.
The storm has already caused destruction in the Yucatán Peninsula and is expected to impact northern Mexico’s Tamaulipas state. Texas coastal areas, including Refugio County and Port Aransas, are under mandatory evacuation orders, and sandbags are being distributed to mitigate flooding.
In Mexico, no major injuries or flooding have been reported, but significant rainfall and wind gusts have occurred. Earlier, Beryl caused 12 deaths and extensive damage in Grenada, Venezuela, and Jamaica. The 2024 Atlantic hurricane season is predicted to be more active than usual, with an expected 17 to 25 named storms.

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