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Search resuls for: "Storm Nicole"


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Subtropical storm Nicole formed early Monday over the Atlantic Ocean and is projected to reach hurricane strength before striking somewhere along the eastern coast of Florida later this week, according to the National Hurricane Center. The center said the storm could produce heavy rainfall, storm surge and flooding. It issued a hurricane watch—meaning hurricane conditions are possible within about 48 hours—for a roughly 200-mile stretch of the state’s southeastern and central-eastern coast from Hallandale Beach to the border of Volusia and Brevard counties, as well as Lake Okeechobee. It declared a storm surge watch from Hallandale Beach to Altamaha Sound in Georgia.
The consensus is that one inch of rainfall above the normal rain for the day can decrease voter turnout up to one percent. Competitive House races that may get above-average precipitation Precipitation above normal (inches) <1 1 2 3+ DISTRICT EXPECTED PRECIP. Competitive Senate races that may get above-average precipitation Precipitation above normal (inches) <1 1 2 3+ STATE EXPECTED PRECIP. warned about rainfall on Tuesday and said on Twitter: “Don't let the rain put a damper on Election Day. Mr. Stein experienced his research topic firsthand when he went to vote early — in the rain — on Oct. 28.
Water's edge: the crisis of rising sea levels
  + stars: | 2014-09-04 | by ( Reuters Graphic | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +20 min
But sea levels have been rising for 100 years in Baltimore.”ROCKET SCIENCEThe irony is evident at Wallops Flight Facility. Yet this bastion of climate research has been slow to apply the science of sea level rise to its own operations. Reviewers from state and federal agencies criticized the 348-page document for failing to adequately take rising sea levels into account in the project design and impact, or to temper future plans for expansion. Joshua Bundick, Wallops’s environmental planning manager, explained that he distilled the issues “down to only the highest points,” and sea level rise wasn’t among them. The cost to American taxpayers of repeated destruction of the parking lot and causeway from rising sea levels would only increase, Fish and Wildlife officials said.
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