Tropical Storm Francine nears hurricane strength as it approaches Gulf Coast. Louisianans are already closing the floodgates

 Tropical Storm Francine is expected to strengthen into a hurricane Tuesday as it charges toward Louisiana where some communities were evacuating and slamming closed their floodgates in anticipation of the storm’s likely landfall there on Wednesday.

Francine was about 400 miles from Cameron, Louisiana, Tuesday morning and packing maximum sustained winds of 65 mph – just 9 mph short of being a hurricane, according to the National Hurricane Center.

Track the Storm: See the latest spaghetti models and other storm maps here.

The strong tropical storm was dousing parts of far South Texas with a few inches of flooding rain and gusty winds Tuesday morning, but will pull away Tuesday and track northeast through the Gulf of Mexico where it will start to intensify once again after battling hostile conditions overnight.

Forecasters expect the storm to strengthen significantly in the record-warm Gulf of Mexico and become a hurricane as early as Tuesday afternoon and then strengthen into a Category 2 hurricane by Wednesday afternoon.

The storm could encounter more hostile conditions that could limit its strength before landfall, but it will not change the impact: Flooding rainfall, powerful winds and potentially life-threatening storm surge threaten to flood roads and cause extensive damage to homes and widespread power outages.

The most severe impacts are likely to be felt in southern Louisiana around the time of landfall, but the storm will be felt long before that over a wider area of the western Gulf Coast.

Rain and scattered thunderstorms will continue along parts of the upper Texas and Louisiana coasts until Francine’s rain bands arrive overnight into Wednesday morning. Tropical storm-force winds could arrive as early as Wednesday morning.

Francine’s most significant threats

A storm’s winds may determine its official strength, but its the water that is most likely to kill. Francine is no different.

Francine will push several feet of the Gulf of Mexico onto normally dry areas across the western Gulf Coast in what’s called storm surge. Storm surge watches and warnings stretch along the coast from far northeastern Texas to the Mississippi-Alabama line. The storm surge threat here is the reason behind several evacuation orders across the Louisiana and Gulf coasts.

Water levels will begin to rise most severely as Francine nears a potential landfall along the central Louisiana coast, where surge levels could reach 10 feet above normal.

Heavy rain-caused flooding also presents a significant threat. Flood watches have been hoisted for parts of the Gulf Coast – some areas that are expected to get doused by Francine were soaked by a non-tropical system last week, so it will take less rain to cause flash flooding.

The outer rain bands of the storm will begin to impact the western Gulf Coast Tuesday evening, thought the most torrential conditions will hold off until late Tuesday night into early Wednesday morning.

The storm is expected to bring rainfall totals of 4 to 8 inches from the coastline of northeast Mexico to southern Mississippi, and some places in southeast Louisiana could see as much as 12 inches.

The storm should weaken quickly as it moves onshore Wednesday, but rainfall is expected to drench parts of the lower and middle Mississippi River Valley through the rest of the week.

Evacuations ordered along the Gulf Coast

Louisiana’s governor to issue a statewide emergency declaration ahead of Francine’s arrival. Gov. Jeff Landry said Monday he has already asked the Federal Emergency Management Agency to prepare to assist.

Evacuation orders expanded along the state’s coast Tuesday.

Mandatory and voluntary evacuations were set to go into effect in parts of Lafourche Parish on Tuesday afternoon, according the parish government. Mandatory evacuations were also in place for Zone 1 in Terrebonne Parish, the parish government said.

Mandatory evacuations orders were issued Monday and expanded Tuesday to the entirety of Louisiana’s Cameron Parish, according to an official’s social media. Both mandatory and voluntary evacuations were ordered farther east in Jefferson Parish’s town of Grand Isle, which was decimated by the Category 4 storm Ida in 2021.

Some parishes, including St. Mary and Terrebonne, started to close off floodgates and distribute sand bags Monday. Terrebonne Parish also declared a state of emergency, according to a news release.

Schools are closed across several Louisiana parishes on Wednesday and Thursday, including Jefferson, Terrebonne and Orleans, which encompasses New Orleans.

In Mississippi, people in the city of Pass Christian have begun to voluntarily evacuate.

The-CNN-Wire