‘Life-threatening’ Hurricane Hermine roars toward Florida

JOSH REPLOGLE, Associated Press

CARRABELLE, Fla. (AP) — Hurricane Hermine roared toward Florida’s Gulf Coast late Thursday, sending battering waves against docks and boathouses as the state braced for its first direct hit from a hurricane in over a decade.

The National Hurricane Center said the storm’s top sustained winds clocked 80 mph (130 kph) by nightfall after the former tropical storm gained strength. As the storm bore down on northwest Florida, the center’s 11 p.m. EDT statement, said Hermine’s eye would come ashore within “the new few hours.”

Hermine’s landfall was expected by early Friday in the Big Bend area — the mostly rural and lightly populated corner where the Florida peninsula meets the Panhandle — then drop back down to a tropical storm and push into Georgia, the Carolinas and up the East Coast with the potential for drenching rain and deadly flooding.

Florida Gov. Rick Scott warned of the danger of strong storm surge, high winds, downed trees and power outages, and had urged people during the day to move to inland shelters if necessary and make sure they had enough food, water and medicine.

“This is a life-threatening situation,” Scott said. “It’s going to be a lot of risk. Right now, I want everybody to be safe.”

Courtney Chason, a longtime resident of Carrabelle in the Big Bend coastal area, warily watched as big waves began bashing some docks and boathouses, the angry surf flowing right over them. Water also crashed into yards closest to the shore.

“I’ve never seen it this high, it’s pretty damn crazy,” Chason said. “I hope it doesn’t get any higher; we need lots of prayers.”

Hermine also sent heavy squalls with its outer bands over Gulf coast beaches elsewhere.

By Thursday evening, the normally wide, sugar-sand beach on Florida’s Treasure Island was entirely covered in water. Palm trees whipped in the wind. Nearby, folks stood gawking at the abnormally large waves and took selfies ahead of the storm.

The city of St. Petersburg was littered with downed palm fronds and tree branches, and low-lying streets were flooded.

In north Florida, some 9,200 power outages were initially reported Thursday evening on an outage map maintained by officials in Tallahassee, the capital city located in north Florida about 35 miles from the coast. Utility officials couldn’t immediately be reached for more details though Florida’s governor had said he feared some of the city’s stately trees might topple over power lines from the storm.

Scott added that 6,000 National Guardsmen in Florida are ready to mobilize after the storm passes. The governors of Georgia and North Carolina declared states of emergency.

At 11 p.m. EDT, the Category 1 hurricane was centered about 75 miles (120 kilometers) southwest of Keaton Beach, Florida, while moving north-northeast at about 14 mph (22 kph). Forecasters reported no change in strength as maximum sustained winds remained at 80 mph (130 kph) as they had hours earlier.

Projected rainfall ranged up to 10 inches in parts of northern Florida and southern Georgia, with 4 to 10 inches possible along the coasts of Georgia and the Carolinas by Sunday. Lesser amounts were forecast farther up the Atlantic Coast, because the storm was expected to veer out to sea.

Florida’s governor ordered many state government offices to close at noon, including those in the Tallahassee, home to tens of thousands of state employees. The city has not had a direct hit from a hurricane in 30 years.

The last hurricane to strike Florida was Wilma, a powerful Category 3 storm that arrived on Oct. 24, 2005. It swept across the Everglades and struck heavily populated south Florida, causing five deaths in the state and an estimated $23 billion in damage.

Residents on some islands and other low-lying, flood-prone areas in Florida were urged to clear out earlier Thursday.

Flooding was expected across a wide swath of the Big Bend, which has a marshy coastline and is made up of mostly rural communities and small towns, where fishing, hunting and camping are mainstays of life.

On Thursday, residents were out in force preparing for the storm, and stores began running low on bottled water and flashlights. City crews struggled to keep up with demand for sand for filling sandbags.

On Cedar Key, a small island along the Big Bend, about a dozen people went from storefront to storefront, putting up shutters and nailing pieces of plywood to protect businesses from the wind.

One of them, Joe Allen, spray-painted on plywood in large black letters: “Bring it on, Hermine.” Despite the bravado, he said, “I’m worried. You can never fully protect yourself from nature.”

Chris Greaves and family members stopped in Tallahassee to pick up sandbags for his garage and the church they attend. Greaves said he lived in South Florida when Hurricane Andrew devastated the area in 1992. While he said he doesn’t expect the same kind of widespread damage, he warned that tropical weather is “nothing to mess with.”

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Associated Press writers Freida Frisaro and Curt Anderson in Miami; Jason Dearen in Perry, Florida; Gary Fineout in Tallahassee, Florida; Jeff Martin in Atlanta; and Bruce Smith, in Charleston, South Carolina, contributed to this report.

 

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