News

Much of North Carolina’s Outer Banks region is under a tropical storm watch with Hurricane Erin expected to skirt the area ...
Hurricane Erin is entering the first stages of a post-tropical transition as it continues to move away from the eastern coast ...
Hurricane Erin is marching north, lashing North Carolina's Outer Banks with rough waves and coastal flooding, and bringing a ...
Hurricane Erin, now a Category 2 hurricane, won't make landfall on the U.S. East Coast, but it will impact residents and ...
Hurricane Erin is moving away from the U.S. coast. Surf and seas remain a problem for our North Carolina beaches through ...
The National Hurricane Center warned that roads in the low-lying barrier islands will become impassable, with waves of 15 to ...
Hurricane Erin's impacts are already underway across the Southeast, bringing dangerous surf and strong rip currents along ...
Dozens of people have been rescued from rip currents as Hurricane Erin churns up the Eastern seaboard. Authorities said about ...
Over the past decade, rip currents have caused about 10% of U.S. fatalities from tropical storms and hurricanes.
Hurricane Erin has not fully moved past North Carolina. However, storm is no longer tracking north-northwest more eastward.
Three flags warn of surf and rip current conditions. Red means a high hazard, yellow means a moderate threat and green means ...
Hurricane Erin neared North Carolina’s Outer Banks on Tuesday and threatened to whip up wild waves and tropical force winds.