The Saline Courier Weekend

Just a Category 1 hurricane? Don’t be fooled by a number — it could be more devastatin­g than a Cat 5

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Here’s a troubling phrase hurricane forecaster­s hate but often hear: “It’s just a Category 1. Nothing to worry about.”

Or even worse:

“Tropical storm? Just some wind and rain.”

But look at Hurricane Beryl, which hit Texas this week as a “mere” Category 1 storm — far weaker in wind strength than when it swept through the Caribbean as a Cat 5 just days earlier — yet still knocked out power to 2.7 million customers. The storm has been blamed for eight deaths in the U.S.

Beryl is not the only example. By the numbers, Tropical Storm Fay in 2008 didn’t even register on the scale of dangerous storms before it made four separate landfalls in Florida. In this case, it was not Fay’s strength, but its speed

— or lack thereof — that turned out to be the key. The listless storm parked itself over the state for days, dumping as much as 25 inches (64 centimeter­s) of rain in some places. Floods killed crops and destroyed homes. Roads were so flooded that alligators swam alongside first responders as they rescued people stranded in their homes.

What’s in a number?

The Saffir-simpson

Scale — which measures the strength of a hurricane’s winds on a scale of Category 1 to Category 5, with 5 being the strongest — was introduced to the public in 1973, the year that gas prices spiked from 39 cents to 55 cents a gallon and Tony Orlando and Dawn had the #1 hit of the year with “Tie a Yellow Ribbon Round the Ole Oak Tree.”

In other words, times have changed, and so should the way people think about how dangerous a storm is when it’s heading their way.

When monitoring storms, “Don’t focus on the category,” advises Craig Fugate, former director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency who also was emergency management director in Florida during some of the state’s worst storms. “We really need to talk about the hurricane’s impacts, not a number” that applies only to wind strength.

Forecaster­s developed the Saffir-simpson scale — and other tools such as flood maps and storm prediction cones — as a type of shorthand to easily and quickly convey a storm’s severity and reach, but they have taken on oversize roles, Fugate said.

“We’re finding that there’s a lot of things in emergency management where we didn’t really think through how we’re going to communicat­e, and we ended up stuck with these legacy descriptio­ns that are hard to shake,” he said.

The circumfere­nce of a storm, how fast it’s moving and the amount of rain it delivers are all factors that matter, as is the place where it hits: its geography, its population and the quality of its infrastruc­ture. Also, it’s important to remember that tornadoes can form regardless of a storm’s size.

A Category 5 storm that’s compact and moving quickly could cause far less damage than a weaker, wetter storm with a huge circumfere­nce that stalls over a populated area, Fugate notes.

For example, Hurricane Charley and Hurricane

Ida were both Category 4 storms. But Charley, which struck Florida’s southwest Gulf Coast in 2004, was compact and lost strength quickly as it moved inland. Ida, which came ashore in Louisiana in 2021, spawned deadly tornadoes and catastroph­ic flooding as far away as the northeaste­rn United States.

Sixty people were killed in New York and New Jersey alone. It also turned out to be the secondcost­liest storm in U.S. history, surpassed only by Hurricane Katrina.

“Charley was a Cat 4 and was very devastatin­g where it made landfall, but Hurricane Ida was a much bigger storm and caused much more widespread devastatio­n,” Fugate noted.

It’s fine to follow The Weather Channel and watch updates from the National Hurricane Center when a storm forms and starts making its way toward land, but the closer it gets, the better it is to seek out local weather informatio­n, Fugate says.

“Everyone focuses on the Hurricane Center,” he said. “They’re responsibl­e for storm intensity and track. They’re not necessaril­y going to have all the local impacts.”

A better place to go as a storm approaches, Fugate says, is the National Weather Service’s homepage, where you can type in a ZIP code and see what’s happening in your area.

“Your (regional) National Weather Service office is taking all that informatio­n and they’re localizing it so they can tell you what kind of wind you can expect, what kind of flooding you can expect,” Fugate says. “Are you in a storm surge area? When are the high tides?”

Relying on FEMA flood zone maps to determine a storm’s potential impact is as ill-advised as depending solely on the Saffirsimp­son scale, Fugate warns.

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