Frances' worst
effects on S.C. to be today
JEFFREY
COLLINS Associated
Press
Tropical Storm Frances came onshore hundreds of miles away from
South Carolina, but the storm still lashed parts of the state Monday
and into Tuesday.
Heavy rains fell throughout the Lowcountry Monday as several weak
tornados were reported in Beaufort County, according to the National
Weather Service. The Grand Strand also was soggy for most of Monday.
It is just the beginning. As the storm slowly moves through the
Florida Panhandle and into eastern Alabama and western Georgia, the
flooding rains and the chance for more tornados will spread north
and west across South Carolina.
The track is one of the worst scenarios for a good part of the
state, said Scott Krentz, a meteorologist with the National Weather
Service's Greer office.
"Not only are we getting the tropical storm's moisture and rain,
it's going to drag moisture in off the Atlantic, Krentz said.
It could be early Thursday before Frances completely clears out,
Krentz said.
The worst weather for most of Monday was confined to the
Lowcountry. Several counties were put under tornado warnings as
spiral bands from Frances moved onshore.
The weather service had not confirmed several reports of tornados
or funnel clouds from Hilton Head Island to Beaufort. No damage was
immediately reported, said Steve Wilkinson, meteorologist in the
weather service's Charleston office.
The storm also is expected to bring flooding rains. In the
Lowcountry 3 to 5 inches of rain could fall in areas already
saturated last weekend from Tropical Storm Gaston. The Midlands and
Pee Dee could see similar amounts, forecasters say.
The heaviest rains could come in the Upstate. Forecasters predict
as much as 6 inches of rain and warn that storms with similar tracks
have dumped up to 10 inches of rain in the area.
Flood watches were issued for the Upstate and Lowcountry.
It's already been a summer of flooding in some parts of the
state. A sudden rainstorm dumped up to 8 inches of over the
headwaters of the Reedy River in July and caused the second-highest
flood ever recorded near downtown Greenville.
Gaston's slow-moving rains last weekend caused record flooding
along Black Creek in Florence County, sending water into several
homes near Quinby, according to the weather service. Parts of
Williamsburg County also were hard-hit.
The rain Monday didn't stop people who fled Florida from trying
to get back to their homes. Interstate 95 heading south near the
Georgia state line was bumper-to-bumper Monday afternoon, with
passenger cars mixing in with utility trucks trying to make it down
to help restore power.
And South Carolina still might not be done with tropical weather.
Hurricane Ivan and its Category 2 winds are about 2,000 from
Charleston. The five-day forecast calls for the storm to be a weak
hurricane between Cuba and the Bahamas Saturday afternoon.
"We'll try to get through this one before we start to worry about
the next one," Wilkinson said from his Charleston office. "We'd just
like a nice sunny
weekend." |