are being urged to get ready for more severe weather as the storms continue to sweep across the country. i m joined now by jack sillin, a weather modeller from cornell university. i gather you have been out taking weather readings. what are conditions like at the moment? in are conditions like at the moment? are conditions like at the moment? , , ., ., ~ moment? in upstate new york we are seeing moment? in upstate new york we are seeing the moment? in upstate new york we are seeing the leftovers moment? in upstate new york we are seeing the leftovers that - are seeing the leftovers that brought the severe weather to the midsouth and we register gusts up to 55 mph on the shores of lake ontario and no major issues now that things have settled down. the major issues now that things have settled down. have settled down. the “obs lasted many i have settled down. the “obs lasted many hours. have settled down. the jobs lasted many hours. how- lasted many hours. how significant i
populated neighborhoods are looking at some of the rainfall totals, 15 inches in parts of louisiana and even new orleans got a photo and wind gusts 172 miles per hour as the storm made landfall on sunday, tornado reports, still threat for tornadoes as the system moves northeastward so there s your elevated threat in the florida panhandle, alabama, georgia and even towards the carolinas and the flooding is going to impact areas across the midsouth, ohio valley, tennessee valley all the way to the northeast and i m concerned about tennessee 17 inches of rainfall last weekend that wasn t even tropical system, this might cause a lot of problems for a lot of people, their saturated ground. we will continue to monitor it. it is impacting louisiana the south, officials warning the death toll will likely rise even more as rescue efforts continue. joining me to discuss his effort
bolton. it s not that the u.s. policy hasn t worked, mika, things have gotten progressively worse over the last three years. they have enough material for between 30 and 40 nuclear weapons. they ve been regularly testing their shorter range missiles. the president says he doesn t care about it. obviously japan and vae dsouth do. they have learned things that they can apply to their longer range systems which can reach us? meanwhile, what are we doing? we re pick angie noing an enorm saying unless you five times pay the amount for what you pay for u.s. force there s, we re going to rethink the entire relationship. plus we ve canceled all sorts of exercises. it s not that this policy hasn t worked, we need a lot more than an apology. what we need say new policy. we need a new policy towards south korea and japan, a more
storm as it moves north was appreciate you being here. a lot of whether over the memorial day holiday weekend as we had deaths because of flooding. the threat is not over. heavy rainfall from alberto, what was tropical storm barbara, subtropical because it has tropical characteristics and the characteristics of a regular storm which is why we re calling it subtropical but it is starting to wind down but the threat for flooding will be ongoing throughout the day. flood watches and warnings posted ahead of the trajectory of the storm. forecast rainfall 4 to 6 inches of heavy downpours in some areas across the midsouth, tennessee, mississippi river valley, the southeast to the mid-atlantic. separate from this the threat for severe storms, we had tornadoes across the high plains, central plains towards the midwest, tornado threat today, throughout the afternoon and evening for these areas shaded in orange and yellow.
35 million under some sort of flood advisory. because alberto, this subtropical system with maximum winds at 65 miles per hour, is on the move. it may not look like a typical tropical system to you. that s because it s a hybrid system. we have a lot of dry air from the west. also have a separation of two plumes of moisture with plenty of rain just to the east of really the more populated cities. look at these rain bands, they re just coming in one after the other. this is the beginning of the big flood threat for the panhandle of florida. we could seal inches or more assuccumulating with this syste. not just to florida, but into alabama, georgia and parts of the midsouth. in the coming days, that moisture will work its way into the tennessee valley and it will bring heavy rain.