Weather Aware: Tornado warning issued for multiple counties

View The Original Article Here

A tornado warning was issued for Alexander, Catawba and Iredell counties ahead of Hurricane Helene.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — A tornado warning is in effect for multiple counties as a line of storms moves across North Carolina. 

The tornado warning was issued for Alexander, Catawba and Iredell counties. The warning is in effect until 9:45 a.m. 

Meteorologist Chris Mulcahy said these warnings were likely issued as a band of storms ahead of Hurricane Helene moves into the Charlotte region. Because Charlotte is on the “dirty” side of the hurricane, the northeast quadrant, the region is at risk for more spin-up tornadoes. 

Hurricane Helene continues to strengthen over the warm Gulf of Mexico, as it was upgraded to a Category 2 hurricane on Thursday morning, the National Hurricane Center said. 

Helene is now a Category 2 hurricane with sustained 100 mph winds. The NHC reported gusts up to 115 mph as the storm entered the Gulf of Mexico with “significant additional strengthening” likely. This process is known as rapid intensification and could lead to catastrophic wind, storm surge and flooding on Florida’s Gulf Coast as Helene makes landfall. 

LIVE RADAR: Tracking Helene, impacts on the Carolinas

A cold front brought heavy rain and severe weather to the Charlotte area on Wednesday and the Carolinas are bracing for the impacts of Hurricane Helene starting Thursday evening. 

Tropical storm watches and warnings are in place, including portions of our viewing area. A Tropical Storm Warning is in effect for Mecklenburg, Union, York, Chester, Gaston, Lincoln, Catawba, Cleveland, Burke, Caldwell and Avery counties. Impacted cities and towns include Banner Elk, Shelby, Lenoir, Morganton, Hickory, Newton, Gastonia, Charlotte, Rock Hill, Fort Mill, Chester, Lincolnton, Monroe, Huntersville, Matthews, and Cheraw.

A Tropical Storm Warning is issued with tropical-storm-force conditions are expected within a 36-hour period. In this case, our conditions will deteriorate Thursday afternoon and last through at least midday Friday.

Additionally, a Flood Watch is in place for Alexander, Catawba, Cleveland, Lincoln, Avery, Burke, Caldwell, Ashe, and Watauga counties. This is due to significant flooding possible for the mountains and foothills especially, where there’s potential for 5-10 inches of rain between now and Friday afternoon.

RELATED: Hurricane inflation: The costliest storms in today’s dollars

Closer to the Charlotte area, rainfall totals will range from 3-6 inches west of I-77 and around 2-4 inches east of the interstate.

On top of the wind and rain, the Carolinas are expected to be in the right-front quadrant of Helene, often referred to as the “dirty side”. This will lead to a higher-than-average risk of quick spin-up tornadoes. Tropical tornadoes are often very weak but they can still produce impacts.

When will Charlotte see impacts?

Impacts begin across the Carolinas Thursday afternoon and evening, becoming more intense through the overnight hours. High winds and heavy rain will last through at least midday Friday before conditions slowly improve throughout the day.

As of 8 a.m. Thursday, Helene is moving through the southern Gulf of Mexico with 100 mph winds. The storm is located about 320 miles southwest of Tampa, Florida, and is moving north-northeast at 12 mph. Helene will continue to move through extremely warm Gulf waters where it may experience more rapid intensification.


The forecast cone for Helene remains largely unchanged from previous models. Once the storm system moves into the Gulf of Mexico on Wednesday, it is expected to rapidly become a hurricane. Landfall is becoming likely in the Big Bend area of Florida Thursday night, at which point the storm is forecast to be a Category 3 major hurricane.

RELATED: ‘Potential to have a huge impact’ | Brad explains new storm threat

What impacts to expect

Rainfall totals near ten inches in the mountains and foothills are possible with half of that across most of the Charlotte area. On top of rainfall, gusty winds of tropical-storm force (above 40 mph) are likely to cause trees to fall and scattered power outages across the region.

Panovich said we should see better weather ahead for the weekend, as the wind and rain will move out fairly quickly.

What you need to know to stay safe

In the event of a severe storm, stay Weather Aware by:

  • Seeking shelters indoors away from lightning and gusty winds
  • Watching for flooded creeks and streams
  • If you encounter a flooded roadway: turn around, don’t drown
  • Monitoring radar for quick-moving thunderstorms that could disrupt outdoor plans

 đŸŒŠī¸ If you like weather, watch Brad Panovich and the WCNC Weather Impact Team on their Emmy Award-winning Weather IQ YouTube channel. đŸŽĨ