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Hurricane Dorian Brings Surge Threat From Florida to Carolinas

Hurricane Dorian Brings Surge Threat From Florida to Carolinas
Hurricane Dorian Brings Surge Threat From Florida to Carolinas

The Category 2 storm was about 95 miles east-northeast of Daytona Beach by noon, the National Hurricane Center said, and heading up the coast at about 9 mph.

Meteorologists warned residents from Sebastian Inlet in Central Florida to Surf City, North Carolina, that they faced “a danger of life-threatening inundation from rising water” within the next 36 hours. In some parts of North and South Carolina, the storm surge could be 4 to 7 feet, and places as far north as Virginia could face flash floods this week. A tornado or two near the coast of Florida was also possible.

The storm is expected to move “dangerously close” to Florida and Georgia through Wednesday night, and Dorian’s center could be close to the Carolinas from Thursday through Friday morning, the National Hurricane Center said.

Forecasters expect little change in the storm’s strength as it continues its northward roll. By the time it is expected to brush by Wilmington, North Carolina, early Friday, forecasters say it will still have winds as strong as 90 mph.

The storm is traveling parallel to the coast, and it is predicted to close in on Charleston, South Carolina, by Thursday afternoon. Gov. Henry McMaster has issued a mandatory evacuation for all of Charleston County, which has a population of more than 400,000.

About a third of the 830,000 people ordered to leave coastal counties in South Carolina have already evacuated, McMaster said Tuesday.

Dorian left devastation in its wake in the Bahamas

As Hurricane Dorian pulled away from the Bahamas, relief workers, medical personnel, pilots and others gathered at a private terminal of the Nassau airport on Wednesday amid boxes of supplies, anxiously awaiting permission from the government to fly to devastated areas and provide assistance.

But with most of the runways on the Abaco Islands and Grand Bahama — the islands most heavily pummeled by the storm — flooded or covered in sand, it was difficult to deliver help or even assess the damage wrought by the storm. In addition, the government has given priority to helicopter evacuations.

“It is frustrating,” said Wes Comfort, director of operations for Heart to Heart International, a Kansas-based group. “There are people who want to help and professionals who know how to help.”

Dorian made landfall as a Category 5 hurricane on Sunday, then lingered, pummeling the northern islands of the Bahamian archipelago for more than three days. At least seven people have died, including children, government officials said, adding that the toll is expected to rise.

Despite the limited access to the islands, pilots have conducted flyovers revealing scenes of absolute devastation. Entire neighborhoods were reduced to unrecognizable fields of rubble, houses were crushed into splinters and boats were tossed into heaps like toys.

The Bahamian prime minister, Hubert Minnis, was able to go on a reconnaissance mission over Abaco on Tuesday afternoon, though storm conditions still prevented flying over Grand Bahama.

“People need mostly food, security and shelter,” Minnis said in brief comments to reporters when he returned.

A man getting his home ready for the storm has died in North Carolina

An 85-year-old man fell off a ladder on Wednesday while he was preparing his home for the storm, and died from his injuries, Gov. Roy Cooper announced at a news conference. It was the first reported storm-related fatality in the state.

Cooper asked residents in areas of the state under evacuation orders to leave. “It is not worth putting your life, or the life of first responders at risk,” he said. He and other emergency management officials urged anyone who had not yet finished preparing for the storm to do so immediately. “We will not underestimate the damage this storm can cause,” the governor said at a news conference.

With the state facing its third hurricane in three years, Cooper added, “please don’t let familiarity get in the way of good judgment.”

Forecasters are tracking two more Atlantic storms, Fernand and Gabrielle

Dorian is not the only storm that the National Hurricane Center is monitoring. In the Gulf of Mexico, Tropical Storm Fernand is pushing northwest at about 6 mph, toward a likely landfall south of the Rio Grande Wednesday night.

With sustained winds near 50 mph, Fernand is expected to strike hardest in Mexico, but will also bring gusty winds to South Texas and the lower Texas coast, with rainfall totals between 2 and 4 inches through Friday in most areas, according to the forecast.

Far away in the eastern Atlantic is Tropical Storm Gabrielle, the season’s seventh named storm. That one is about 1,300 miles southwest of the Azores, and does not appear at this time to pose a threat to any land, the center said.

September is usually the busiest month of the storm season.

There were ominous skies in Orlando, but it was largely business as usual

Orange clouds drifted over Orlando on Tuesday night, but its residents were relaxed and many businesses remained open, with Walt Disney World vowing to return to relative normalcy Wednesday morning.

Jerry Demings, the mayor of Orange County, which includes Orlando, opened a news conference Tuesday night by sending his prayers to the Bahamas.

“I do realize that the emotional turmoil that residents and guests on the island have and will experience will be life changing for them,” he said. “And so we are fortunate that it does not appear that we will experience” a similar devastation.

As of about 8:30 p.m., rain had begun to fall and the Orlando International Airport had recorded winds at 21 mph, with gusts near 40.

In the Holden Heights area of Orlando, a Rent-A-Center and several other storefronts were boarded up. Starbucks stores nearby posted signs saying they were closed because of the hurricane.

But most establishments appeared to be operating as usual.

At Hermanos Barber Shop, where four people were getting haircuts Tuesday night, employees said they had not even considered closing.

“If there’s no curfew, we’ll be here,” said Alex Presinal, the manager.

He said that, as normal, the store planned to open at 9 a.m. Wednesday.

At Paisano’s Pizza and Pasta, employees said they had been deluged all day with customers.

“We’ve been slammed,” said Leila, an employee who declined to give her last name, as she slid another pizza box onto the counter for a delivery driver.

Walt Disney World, which had closed some of parks Tuesday, announced that it planned to reopen all but the Typhoon Lagoon Water Park on Wednesday.

This article originally appeared in

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