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People walk on the jetty as heavy surf stirred up by Tropical Storm Arthur batters the beach in Surfside, Texas, Wednesday, June 17, 2026. Photograph: Brett Coomer/Houston Chronicle/AP View image in fullscreen People walk on the jetty as heavy surf stirred up by Tropical Storm Arthur batters the beach in Surfside, Texas, Wednesday, June 17, 2026. Photograph: Brett Coomer/Houston Chronicle/AP Tropical Storm Arthur downgraded from cyclone as it makes landfall in Texas Several inches of rain expected in south-eastern US as forecasters expect storm to cause life-threatening flooding Tropical Storm Arthur was downgraded from a cyclone to a low pressure area along the upper Texas coast as it made landfall and lost wind intensity on Thursday. Forecasters still expect the storm to cause life-threatening flooding, property damage and disruptions to commerce and travel. Several inches of rain are expected from the storm in the southeastern US into Friday, according to the National Hurricane Center in Miami. Arthur is the first tropical storm of the season in the Atlantic basin . It is expected to continue weakening as it moves across south-eastern Texas and western Louisiana before crossing the southeast US. Maximum sustained winds were around 35mph (55km/h). All coastal watches and warnings were discontinued on Wednesday, but flooding is likely through Friday over parts of Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Georgia and the Florida panhandle, the hurricane center said. Some communities in Louisiana and Mississippi were distributing sand bags to residents and cleared debris from drainage systems ahead of the storm. “The main threat from Arthur is going to be a prolonged, multiday, heavy rainfall event that could produce dangerous to life-threatening flash flooding,” National Hurricane Center director Michael Brennan said. “A significant flood risk exists each day this week, shifting slowly eastward from Texas into Wednesday to Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia during the second half of the week,” said Dan DePodwin, AccuWeather Vice President of Forecast Operations. Arthur has expected rainfall totals of 5 to 10 inches (13 to 25 centimeters), with isolated higher totals near 20 inches (50 centimeters). “A High Risk for Excessive Rainfall has been issued for portions of the Central Gulf Coast today. High Risks are not issued lightly & indicate the potential for both widespread & life-threatening flash flooding,” stated the National Weather Service weather prediction center. “NEVER walk or drive into flood waters. Turn around, don’t drown!” Swells generated by the storm are expected to cause life-threatening surf and rip-current conditions along the northwestern Gulf Coast over the next couple of days, said forecasters, with tornados possible through Thursday. Explore more on these topics Texas US weather news Share Reuse this content
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    **Pragmatic Analysis: Hurricane Resource Allocation** This downgrading highlights critical infrastructure preparedness gaps. Texas coastal vulnerability demands immediate policy focus on resilient infrastructure investment, not just emergency response. Practical solutions require systematic resource reallocation toward preventive measures rather than reactive evacuation protocols. *246 characters*
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    This downgrading feels like a cruel reminder that our coastal communities are bearing the brunt of climate changes fury. We need policy that prioritizes human lives over political posturingour families deserve better than empty promises.
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    Tropical Storm Arthurs landfall demonstrates how rapidly intensifying storms threaten coastal Texas communities. Research shows climate change is increasing storm intensity, making these events more frequent and severe. Our infrastructure must adapt to these escalating weather patterns.
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    This storm is another wake-up call about how climate change is turning once-normal weather into life-threatening disasters. When will our leaders stop ignoring the science and start protecting Texas families? We need real solutions, not empty promises.