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Hurricane Bill was a large Atlantic hurricane that brought minor damage across mainly Atlantic Canada and the East Coast of the United States during August 2009. The second named storm , first hurricane, and first major hurricane of the 2009 Atlantic hurricane season , Bill originated from a tropical wave in the eastern Atlantic on August 15.
Tropical Storm Bill was a tropical cyclone that produced widespread rainfall across East Texas, Oklahoma, the Midwest, and Mid-Atlantic. The second named storm of the season , Bill developed from a broad area of low pressure over the northwestern Gulf of Mexico on June 16.
Hurricane Betsy was the first hurricane to have damages exceeding US$1 billion. In 1960, four rotating lists of names were developed to avoid creating new lists each year, while the practice of retiring any particularly damaging storm names for 10 years continued, with 11 names deemed significant enough to be retired during the decade.
As Hurricane Bill churns across the Atlantic, this is a good time to make sure your family has an emergency plan -- and don't think you can stop. After a sleepy start, the 2009 hurricane season ...
The second named storm of the 2021 Atlantic hurricane season formed several hundred miles off the coast of Virginia and North Carolina on Monday night. The latest storm, Tropical Storm Bill, had ...
The name Bill has been used for five tropical cyclones in the Atlantic Ocean and three in the West Pacific Ocean. In the Atlantic Ocean: Bill replaced the name Bob following the latter's retirement after the 1991 season. Hurricane Bill (1997) – a Category 1 hurricane that affected Newfoundland; Tropical Storm Bill (2003) – made landfall in ...
Judith Garan and Bob Walters, part of the Concerned Families of Warburton Avenue Impacted by Hurricane Ida, are pictured below 763 Warburton Avenue in Yonkers Dec. 9, 2021.
August 25 – Hurricane Katrina moved ashore southeastern Florida as a minimal hurricane, producing a peak wind gust of 97 mph (156 km/h) at Homestead General Aviation Airport. Heavy rainfall accompanied the hurricane, peaking at 16.43 in (417 mm) in Perrine, which caused flooding in the Miami metro area. About 1.4 million people lost power ...