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Subject: Re: Hurricane is coming...
Posted by: Tom Johnson
Host: wbar2.chi1-4-10-111-244.chi1.dsl-verizon.net
IP #: 4.10.111.244
E-mail: <tjohnson@jgireps.com>
Date Posted: September 01, 2004 at 16:46:39
Subject: Re: Hurricane is coming...
Message:
: Best wishes to the Family Islands, if anyone is online keep us posted on the
: Hurricane from your out-island perspective.
Florida Calls for Hurricane Evacuations
Good luck as Hurricane Frances heads your way. I copied an article from the
weather channel.
Tom Johnson
Fort Wayne, Indiana
Email this Story
Sep 1, 3:24 PM (ET)
By JOHN PAIN
(AP) Hurricane Frances is seen in this satellite image at on a computer screen
at the National Hurricane...
Full Image
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MIAMI (AP) - Hundreds of thousands of people were told Wednesday to get ready
to evacuate as powerful Hurricane Frances crept closer to Florida just weeks
after Hurricane Charley's rampage. It would be the worst double hurricane
strike on one state in at least a century.
Generators were hefted off store shelves, along with water, canned goods and
other emergency supplies as forecasters warned the core of the Category 4 storm
with 140-mph top sustained winds was due along Florida's Atlantic coast late
Friday or early Saturday. Charley left billions of dollars in damage and 27
people dead when it swept across the peninsula Aug. 13.
"I can't emphasize enough how powerful this is. If there's something out there
that's going to weaken it, we haven't seen it," National Hurricane Center
director Max Mayfield said.
About 300,000 residents in coastal areas of Palm Beach County were told to
evacuate starting 2 p.m. Thursday.
(AP) Meteorologist Richard Pasch studies his computer screen as he and others
at the National Hurricane...
Full Image
In Rockledge, about 45 miles southeast of Orlando, Brevard County told at least
50,000 residents to start evacuating mobile homes and barrier islands Thursday
afternoon. In Stuart about 85 miles south, Martin County planned to urge up to
7,500 residents to evacuate low-lying areas starting at noon Thursday. More
evacuation orders along Florida's east coast were likely.
The Kennedy Space Center planned to close Thursday and Friday to allow workers
time to board up their homes and evacuate if necessary, said NASA spokesman
George Diller. Helicopters and planes left Patrick Air Force Base.
Craig Fugate, director of the state Division of Emergency Management, said
steps were being taken for to prepare for large-scale evacuations, including
possibly reversing lanes of some highways to accommodate fleeing coastal
residents.
Frances was nearing the Bahamas with steady strength, but it was expected to
fluctuate in intensity and could become a Category 5 storm with top sustained
winds of 156 mph or higher, forecasters said. The storm could hit anywhere from
South Florida to South Carolina as early as late Friday.
Hurricane-force winds extended up to about 80 miles from Frances' center,
making it about twice the width of Charley and increasing the possibility for
damage, forecasters said.
"The lessons of these storms are that all the science in the world and all the
technology in the world isn't going to be able to pinpoint exactly where the
storm goes," Gov. Jeb Bush cautioned.
Records from the last century show no two Category 4 storms with winds of 131-
155 mph hitting a state within weeks of each other, hurricane center
meteorologist Rick Knabb said.
The last time two major hurricanes hit Florida in rapid succession was 1950.
Hurricane Easy hit Tampa around Sept. 4 of that year and Hurricane King hit
Miami six weeks later on Oct. 17. They were Category 3 storms.
Nancy Cuffaro, whose home and pizza restaurant were damaged by Charley, said
she was hoping Frances would spare the area still cleaning up and recovering
emotionally. She is in Port Charlotte in hard-hit southwest Florida; the
greatest danger from Frances is along the state's east coast.
"I know we can't withstand too much. I really don't know what to think here.
I'm lost. It's starting to get to me," said Cuffaro, whose restaurant still
didn't have electricity Wednesday.
With the memories of destruction so fresh, many people didn't need an official
heads-up to begin preparing. About two dozen people lined up Wednesday morning
at a Home Depot store west of Miami, waiting to pay for items such as
generators, tarps, flashlights and batteries.
A Home Depot to the south in Florida City, ground zero during Hurricane Andrew
12 years ago, more than doubled its daily sales, ran out of generators and
plywood and pushed $50,000 worth of lumber out the doors Tuesday, said Lisa
Ftiffler, assistant store manager.
"We are completely out of stock of plywood," she said Wednesday. "We are
waiting on another truck. We have people since 5 a.m. waiting for generators
and the plywood."
North Miami Beach resident Lorraine Lewis bought a small cooking stove in case
of emergency but wasn't planning to stick around long enough to use it.
"I have water and plastic and a plane ticket," she said. She said she bought
the ticket to New York on Wednesday, planned to cover her furniture with
plastic and get out. "It will be too hot staying here without light for days."
At 2 p.m., Frances was centered about 60 miles east-northeast of Grand Turk
Island southeast of the Bahamas and 700 miles east-southeast of Palm Beach. It
was moving west-northwest at around 15 mph.
With landfall possible on the Atlantic Coast from one end of the state to the
other, wary officials watched the clock and forecasts as they grew more
refined. Some schools in coastal districts already decided to close Thursday
and Friday.
Miami-Dade County, home to about 2.3 million people, would need 24 to 36 hours
to evacuate people in low-lying areas, emergency management spokesman Louie
Fernandez said. The county's decision on evacuations would need to be made over
the next day or so.
State officials worried about finding hotel rooms and shelters for people who
may need to evacuate. Many hotel rooms in the southern half of the state are
occupied by people left homeless by Charley and out-of-state emergency workers.
Some schools and community centers are still being used as shelters.
But Federal Emergency Management Agency officials said they were ready.
"We have all the operations, all the resources that we need to respond to a
major emergency," said FEMA spokesman Justo Hernandez.
With top sustained winds of 145 mph, Charley destroyed or heavily damaged more
than 30,000 homes and did an estimated $7.4 billion in insured damage. It was
the worst natural disaster to hit Florida since Andrew caused $15.5 billion in
insured damage and killed 15 people.
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