Hurricane Erin moving away from East Coast
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FOX 5 New York on MSNTracking Hurricane Erin in NJ, NY: Timeline, impacts and Sandy comparison
Hurricane Erin tracks offshore, sparing landfall. Unlike Sandy’s 2012 surge, Erin brings high surf, rip currents, and minor flooding risks.
A coastal flood warning is in effect for the Jersey Shore and New York's south-facing beaches today, as Hurricane Erin causes dangerous conditions.
Hurricane Erin is still at sea, but her wrath is hitting New York and New Jersey in the form of dangerous rip currents that have shut down beaches. Waves could reach up to 13 feet at some beaches, according to New York City Mayor Eric Adams.
Hurricane Erin is bringing 100 mph winds and dangerous rip currents to coastal towns, prompting beach closures and tropical storm warnings from North Carolina to Virginia.
Hurricane Erin continues to churn in the Atlantic waters hundreds of miles off the U.S., prompting officials to close beaches along the East Coast from the mid-Atlantic to the Northeast.
Erin has become an unusually large and deceptively worrisome system, with tropical storm-force winds spreading across 500 miles (800 kilometers) - roughly the distances from New York City to Pittsburgh. It remained a Category 2 hurricane early Thursday ...
New York City closed its beaches to swimming on Wednesday and Thursday, and New York Gov. Kathy Hochul ordered three state beaches on Long Island to
Fox Weather on MSN1h
Hurricane Erin spreads life-threatening rip currents, potentially 16-foot waves to New York beaches
FOX Weather Meteorologist Jane Minar reports live from Long Beach, New York, on the south shore of Long Island, where life-threatening rip currents and potentially 12- to 16-foot waves are forecast due to Hurricane Erin churning up the Atlantic Ocean for hundreds of miles.