FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — The National Hurricane Center said Fred regained its tropical storm status in the Gulf of Mexico early Sunday just hours before Grace was demoted to a tropical depression.
Fred was forecast to move across the Gulf and reach the coast as early as this afternoon, forecasters said. They said people from Alabama to the central Florida Panhandle should monitor the system’s progress.
A tropical storm warning is now in effect for the coast of the Florida Panhandle from Navarre to the Wakulla/Jefferson County line, meaning tropical storm conditions are expected somewhere within the warning area in the next 24 hours. A storm surge warning has been issued for part of Florida’s Big Bend area. That’s the spot on the Gulf Coast where the Florida peninsula turns west into the Panhandle.
Fred’s maximum sustained winds stood at 50 mph Sunday night.
Anticipating Fred, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency for the state’s Panhandle region. And Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey issued a statement Saturday saying her administration was monitoring the weather and “will be ready to act from the state level if needed.”
Fred was located Sunday night about 200 miles south of Panama City, Florida, and moving north-northwest at 9 mph.
Fred had been downgraded to a tropical wave on Saturday. Tropical waves can contain winds and heavy rain, but do not circulate around a center point or an “eye” like a tropical storm or hurricane.
Meanwhile, Grace was demoted to a depression as its maximum sustained winds fell to 35 mph, below the 39 mph threshold for a tropical storm. It was located about 260 miles east-southeast of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Sunday night.
Tropical storm warnings for Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands were discontinued.
A tropical storm watch was issued for the Haiti and the Dominican Republic.
The storm was moving west at 15 mph.
Both Grace and Fred, regardless of their storm status, posed a heavy rain and flood threat, forecasters said.
Rainfall totals around 4 to 8 inches were forecast from Grace for Haiti and the Dominican Republic, through Tuesday.
Fred was forecast to bring roughly the same amount of rainfall to the Big Bend of Florida and the Panhandle.
A tropical storm earlier in the week, Fred had weakened to a depression by its spin over Haiti and the Dominican Republic, where it knocked out power to some 400,000 customers and caused flooding that forced officials to shut part of the country’s aqueduct system, interrupting water service for hundreds of thousands of people.
Local officials reported hundreds of people were evacuated and some buildings were damaged.