Hurricane Dolly Churns Toward Texas
Officials Fear Storm Could Break Rio Grande Levees; National Guard Troops Mobilized
-
-
Photo
This satellite image provided by the NOAA shows Hurricane Dolly starting to make landfall along the coasts of Texas and Mexico at 1:15 a.m. EDT, July 23, 2008. (CBS/NOAA/National Hurricane Center)
-
Photo
Cars leaving South Padre Island crowd the outgoing side of the bridge as Tropical Storm Dolly approaches the South Texas coast, July 22, 2008 in Port Isabel, Texas. Dolly later strengthened into a hurricane. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)
-
Photo
Michael Gorsline moves around to board up the third window on a back room of his home on July 21, 2008, in Corpus Christi. Gorsline said he wanted to be prepared in case Tropical Storm Dolly strengthened and made landfall in the Coastal Bend area. (AP PHOTO)
-
-
Play CBS Video
Video
Hurricane Blasts Toward Texas
Hurricane Dolly closed in on Texas with 75 mph winds. Warnings have been issued along the Texas coastline where it is expected hit land. Dave Price reports.
-
Video
Dolly Heads For Texas
Tropical storm Dolly is expected to become a hurricane when it hits Texas. Residents are being warned to prepare. Dave Price reports.
-
Interactive
Storm Tracker
Follow all the storms of the 2009 season with satellite images, warnings and wind speed charts.
-
Interactive
Storm Season
Track the latest storms, see how they form, get preparation tips and more.
The Category 1 hurricane was expected to strengthen slightly before making landfall later in the day, bringing with it up to 15 inches of rain.
The storm was packing sustained winds near 80 miles per hour as it headed toward the U.S.-Mexico border and the heavily populated Rio Grande Valley.
A hurricane warning was in effect for the coast of Texas from Brownsville to Corpus Christi and in Mexico from Rio San Fernando northward.
The National Weather Service in Brownsville said conditions were favorable for tornadoes in deep South Texas and the adjacent coastal waters. Forecasters predicted Dolly could dump up to 20 inches of rain and bring coastal storm surge flooding up to 6 feet above normal high tide levels.
In Mexico, officials planned to evacuate 23,000 people to government shelters. Texas officials were urging residents to move away from the Rio Grande levees.
At local stores there was a run on plywood to protect windows, but as CBS Early Show weather anchor Dave Price reported, Dolly's most serious threat is water, not wind.
Texas officials urged residents to move away from the levees because if Dolly continues to follow the same path as 1967's Hurricane Beulah, "the levees are not going to hold that much water," said Cameron County Emergency Management Coordinator Johnny Cavazos.
The first bands of rain began to pass over South Padre Island and Reynosa, Mexico Tuesday afternoon and the surf continued to get rougher.
Tropical storm warnings were issued for areas adjacent to the hurricane zone, and Gov. Rick Perry declared 14 South Texas counties disasters, allowing state resources to be used to send equipment and emergency workers to areas in the storm's path.
CBS affiliate KGBT reported that Perry had also put the state's military force on alert - making 1,200 men and women with the Army National Guard and Air and Texas National Guards ready for deployment orders in response to Dolly.
"Currently we have soldiers based in Austin, San Antonio, Houston," Col. Bill Meehan of the Texas Army National Guard Center in Austin told KBGT. "And we have two air units that are prepared to launch; one out of Austin, one out of San Antonio."
Please stay away from those levees.
Johnny Cavazos, Cameron County Emergency Management Coordinator"We could have a triple-decker problem here," Cavazos told a meeting of more than 100 county and local officials Tuesday. "We believe that those (levees) will be breached if it continues on the same track. So please stay away from those levees."
Around Brownsville, levees protect the historical downtown as well as preserved buildings that were formerly part of Fort Brown on the University of Texas at Brownsville campus. Outside the city, agricultural land dominates the banks of the Rio Grande, but thousands of people live in low-lying colonias, often poor subdivisions built without water and sewer utilities.
The International Boundary and Water Commission, which operates a series of levees, dams and floodways in the lower Rio Grande Valley, put its personnel on standby alert.
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.



I hope that everybody in harms way has supplies for 2 weeks because thats FEMA''s response time.
Hurricane Dolly is in the Gulf of Mexico gas prices need to shoot up 25 cents per gallon for no reason at all.
Last: The Bush Administration has just found out about Hurricanes, One of Mother Natures WMD''s, and Bushie has put an APB on Mother Nature with a Shoot to Kill order, this is they last time Mother Nature will cause Drama for George W Bushie and the Gulf Coast. By Killing Mother Nature George Bush thinks that there will not be any more Hurricanes.
Press secretary said Bu$h would drop by for a photo op when the wind dies down, said he will bring McSame with him. They are not sure they want poor people to be in the pictures, tho - they don''t vote Republicon...
Repent the error of your ways, Texas!
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted by MeanBiker
***********************
That would have to be one H*ll of a hurricane..since the illegals are in all 50 states and the District of Crooks.
Repent the error of your ways, Texas!
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted by DaShortRound
**********************
Good joke! At least I hope it was a joke..otherwise..you''re scary!
I hope you''re joking with that one, too. That''s idiotic!
And here we go again...another storm targeting minorities. This time when FEMA doesn''t jump in and help the illegals, I''m sure the rest of us will get slammed for being racist...
Why not have dump trucks ready to catch the rain in and truck it to the parched areas? Better yet, a large bowl with hoses running there to use the extra water...let''s think this one through people!! Do something Texas style!!!
The bottom line is people have encrouched on Nature, and Nature wants her area back!! Simple enough for you?
It is a shame all these hurricaines and we can''t devise something to take advantage of all that power from the wind and rain.
Let''s see how long before everyone wants a hand out and we hear about it for years. KUDOS TO THE MIDWEST FOR DOING IT WITHOUT A HANDOUT!!!
Prepare well because you can''t count on FEMA or any one of these U.S. government organizations to help, they''re all so incompetent! Maybe some day---
--------------------------------
That''s funny, as that was my strategy after the ''04 "election" results. Unfortunately, the tank didn''t last through this second term.
Thanks for only being a Cat 1 storm. FEMA is not ready for you to make land fall so please be good to Texas and not so destructive.
-
by blessed1959
July 23, 2008 12:26 PM EDT
- so, Bush is still in the storm creating business! HA
-
Reply to this comment
-
See all 29 Comments