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Hurricane Alex 2010: First Atlantic Hurricane Of The Season

CHRISTOPHER SHERMAN   07/ 1/10 12:45 AM ET   AP

Hurricane Alex
Hurricane Alex when it was still a tropical storm. (AP Photo/NOAA)

SAN FERNANDO, Mexico — Hurricane Alex made landfall on Mexico's Gulf coast as a powerful Category 2 storm Wednesday, spawning tornadoes in nearby Texas, forcing evacuations in both countries and whipping up high waves that frustrated oil-spill cleanup efforts and pushed crude onto beaches.

Alex hit a relatively unpopulated stretch of coast in Mexico's northern Tamaulipas state about 110 miles (180 kms) south of Brownsville, Texas, and was pushing inland at 10 mph (17 kph), the U.S. National Hurricane Center said.

Its heavy rains and 110 mph (160 kph) winds lashed Mexican fishing villages, whose residents fled inland to the town of San Fernando on buses and in the back of pickup trucks.

Hundreds of people filled a storm shelter in an auditorium in San Fernando.

"We didn't bring anything but these clothes," said evacuee Carolina Sanchez, 21, motioning to two small plastic bags at her feet, as her 3-year-old sister Belen Sanchez Gonzalez clutched a purple and white stuffed toy poodle at the storm shelter. Her father, a fisherman, was one of many coastal residents who stayed behind to keep watch on their homes and possessions.

Engineer Abel Ramirez of San Fernando's Civil Protection and Fire Department said seven fishing villages, with a combined population of about 5,000, were being evacuated.

The civil defense office in Matamoros, across the border from Brownsville, said Alex's rains had already flooded around 30 neighborhoods there and officials were using small boats to rescue some residents.

Alex spawned two tornadoes around Brownsville, including one that flipped over a trailer. Officials also closed the causeway to South Padre Island, a popular vacation getaway off the Texas coast, and 9-foot waves were reported on the island's beach.

But officials in Texas said the U.S. state had been spared a direct hit. No injuries or severe damage were immediately reported.

The National Weather Service downgraded its storm warning for the Texas coast from hurricane to tropical storm strength.

More than 1,000 people in low-lying Hidalgo and Cameron counties fled to storm shelters. More than 1,000 homes were without power late Wednesday, with the biggest outage caused not by the storm but by a car that ran into a utility pole, American Electric Power spokesman Andy Heines said.

At least 100 families took shelter in a Brownsville high school.

Sergio Gonzales, 18, arrived with nine other family members after his father decided their house may not survive the flood.

Gonzales didn't agree with his dad.

"I think it's just going to be a normal one," he said.

The main threat as the hurricane begins to fall apart over land will be tornadoes, which could last another day or two, hurricane center meteorologist Chris Landsea said.

The other big threat is rain, Landsea said. Parts of Mexico and Texas are expected to get 6-12 inches of rain, which could cause flash flooding farther west, away from the coast, he said.

The storm was far from the Gulf oil spill, but cleanup vessels were sidelined by the hurricane's ripple effects. Six-foot waves churned up by the hurricane splattered beaches in Louisiana, Alabama and Florida with oil and tar balls.

It was the first June hurricane in the Atlantic since 1995, according to the hurricane center.

Many in the border cities braved the growing rains: Commuters struggled to get to work, pedestrians crossed the bridge connecting Matamoros and Brownsville and newspaper hawkers manned the less-flooded intersections.

Government workers stuck duct tape in X's across the windows of the immigration office at the main downtown bridge in Matamoros on Tuesday. Trucks cruised slowly down residential streets carrying large jugs of drinking water and cars packed supermarket parking lots.

Flash floods also forced hundreds of evacuations in the southern Mexican states of Oaxaca and Guerrero, but hurricane specialist Eric Blake said those rains were only indirectly related to Alex and possibly the residual effects of Hurricane Darby, which has dissipated in the Pacific.

Three people, including a 5-year-old child, were killed when heavy rains and winds brought down a wall over their wooden house in Acapulco, state Civil Protection authorities said.

Texas also watched Alex's outer bands warily. Alex was expected to bring torrential rains to a Rio Grande delta region that is ill-suited – economically and geographically – to handle it.

Texas residents had been preparing for the storm for days, readying their homes and businesses and stocking up on household essentials. But concerns eased as the storm headed farther south toward Mexico.

Engineers were watching the levees in south Texas as the storm approached the area.

Scientists in Texas were also monitoring a buoy system that records the Gulf's water directions and velocity every half-hour. That information will determine where the oil could spread, should it approach Texas as tar balls on the beach, said Texas land commissioner Jerry Patterson.

Oil rigs and platforms in the path of the storm's outer bands were evacuated, and President Barack Obama issued a pre-emptive federal disaster declaration for southern Texas counties late Tuesday.

The three oil rigs and 28 platforms evacuated are not part of the Gulf oil spill response.

In Louisiana, the storm pushed an oil patch toward Grand Isle and uninhabited Elmer's Island, dumping tar balls as big as apples on the beach. Cleanup workers were kept at bay by pouring rain and lightning that zigzagged across the dark sky. Boom lining the beach had been tossed about, and it couldn't be put back in place until the weather cleared.

"The sad thing is that it's been about three weeks since we had any big oil come in here," marine science technician Michael Malone said. "With this weather, we lost all the progress we made."

___

Associated Press Writers Paul J. Weber in Brownsville, Texas and Mary Foster and Tom Breen in Grand Isle, Louisiana, contributed to this report.

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SAN FERNANDO, Mexico — Hurricane Alex made landfall on Mexico's Gulf coast as a powerful Category 2 storm Wednesday, spawning tornadoes in nearby Texas, forcing evacuations in both countries and...
SAN FERNANDO, Mexico — Hurricane Alex made landfall on Mexico's Gulf coast as a powerful Category 2 storm Wednesday, spawning tornadoes in nearby Texas, forcing evacuations in both countries and...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
brunnegd
08:56 AM on 07/01/2010
News Flash: White House blames Alex on Bush.
08:20 PM on 06/30/2010
Yaaaaaay! Suck it, Texas.
07:27 PM on 06/30/2010
Who thinks they wont pass a law and who thinks they will pass a law about the spill i actually think they learned a lesson and i hope it will never happen again.
06:05 PM on 06/30/2010
Did you know that BP knew there was a eak in one of the pipes it said in an email and they replyed nah dont worry about it continue with your work . so guess what they really know there was a leak and the government didnt prosicute them or give them a fine . they need to clean up this mess and pay the fine . they are all only about the cash thats why they didnt care to fix the pipe but right now they still having money so they need to give up that money to all the dieing animals out there!
05:20 PM on 06/30/2010
we really need help with the oil spill
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
miketothad
trollslayer
04:57 PM on 06/30/2010
Go, Speaker Pelosi
Fear is for right wing-know nothings and the politically illiterate "independents".
http://www.declareyourself.com/voting_faq/state_by_state_info_2.html
05:39 PM on 06/30/2010
ya ya ya... we still need to follow the laws
03:42 PM on 06/30/2010
And let me guess....BP has no preparation for this either...
cause they never anticipated hurricanes.
03:36 PM on 06/30/2010
And you tell me there is no God? Good luck with your science.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
miketothad
trollslayer
03:34 PM on 06/30/2010
Brought to you by anti-"gov't" idiots:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CAVTFhI7WHM
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Netflyer
Tree Hugger in firm support of President Obama!
03:01 PM on 06/30/2010
People----

Are we finally getting IT???

This is what happens when you allow powerful corporations who are interested only in juicing quarterly profits to buy off our leadership, write our legislation. and be allowed to "regulate" themselves.

The BP's of the world are poisoning our nation and planet because we LET THEM
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
03:44 PM on 06/30/2010
No , I disagree. This is what you get when you elect corrupt politicians.
06:01 PM on 06/30/2010
well they will pass a law you wait and see
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
drini
daughter of houdini
08:02 PM on 06/30/2010
the Girl Scouts would become corrupt if placed in a position of absolute power.

Perhaps they weren't AS corrupt before being elected, but I think it is impossible to judge whom is corrupt ahead of time, and even more difficult to convince other voters to think the way you do.

better yet, let's outlaw lobbyists and special interests. that should make a major dent in corruption.
05:26 PM on 06/30/2010
it needs to be illigal not to have a plan before drilling oil
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
phillip finley
stay strong!....Dems!
02:40 PM on 06/30/2010
Hey hurricane alex we got here first BP with the oil spill........you are a johnny come lately to mess thing up.......party crashers!......
05:55 PM on 06/30/2010
Ummm saying that isnt gonna do nothing so you can keep it to yourself...
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LeFlaneur
does nuance.
02:30 PM on 06/30/2010
I'm confused, is this Obama's My Lai Massacre or his Firestorm of Dresden?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
gransview
"Reality is just a collective hunch" L Tomlin
02:40 PM on 06/30/2010
Yep, you're confused
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03:37 PM on 06/30/2010
Wow are you ever!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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02:09 PM on 06/30/2010
Oh the HUMANITY!?! Who'd have thunk this could happen during hurricane season!?!
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JustaSlob
"I'll either be dead or in jail" ..Need help TED?
01:30 PM on 06/30/2010
"we got two generators and lots of guns and ammo, so we're not worried about it," Jerry Wilson said. What's he going to do, shoot the hurricane?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
DimBulb2
01:35 PM on 06/30/2010
no

people looking for food and water
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JustaSlob
"I'll either be dead or in jail" ..Need help TED?
01:42 PM on 06/30/2010
I wonder if he voted for McCain/Palin. (tobacco spit)
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LeFlaneur
does nuance.
02:12 PM on 06/30/2010
What is it about some people that make me think they have post-apocalyptic fantasies?