Miami, Lauderdale ports to shut for Ernesto
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East Coast storm slowly moves out to sea Nov. 14: A powerful storm born from the remnants of Tropical Storm Ida continues to move out to sea after raking the East Coast for three days. The Weather Channel's Julie Martin reports. |
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Mass evacuations
Thousands were evacuated ahead of the storm in Cuba, where the communist government regularly undertakes mass evacuations before tropical storms and hurricanes to minimize injury and loss of life. There were no reports of damage.
Cubans moved cattle to higher ground, tourists were evacuated from hotels in the southeastern province of Granma and baseball games, including a pre-Olympic qualifier between the United States and Mexico, were rescheduled for earlier in the day. Train service across the country was also stopped while the storm passes.
A hurricane watch also was posted for the northwestern Bahamas and a tropical storm warning was issued for the central Bahamas.
Cruise ship companies said they were diverting several liners to avoid the storm.
Ernesto could return to open ocean north of Cuba as early as Monday night, Rubiera said.
In a four-hour period early Monday, the storm dropped 3.3 inches of water in the province of Guantanamo, authorities said.
Haiti hunkers down
In Haiti, heavy rains in some mountain areas raised fears of flash floods in the heavily deforested country. But only one death was reported — a woman who drowned Sunday on Vache island, off Haiti’s south coast, said Elizabeth Verluyten, a disaster management coordinator in the country for the Pan American Health Organization.
People put goats and cows into shelters, fishermen pulled nets ashore and Haitian officials went on the radio to warn people in flimsy shantytowns to seek shelter in schools and churches as the storm approached. As the storm passed, government and relief officials planned to fly over affected areas to assess any damage, Verluyten said.
In the neighboring Dominican Republic, heavy rains swelled rivers and flooded more than 400 houses in the capital of Santo Domingo and nearby San Cristobal province, displacing 1,656 people, Juan Manuel Mendez of the National Emergency Commission said Monday.
A tropical storm warning was in effect for Jamaica and the central Bahamas.
Cruise ship companies said they were diverting several liners to avoid the storm.
Florida in the crosshairs
Forecasters warned that in three days, Ernesto could hit anywhere in Florida.
“We do expect it to reach the gulf, maybe as a Category 1 hurricane, possibly a Category 2,” said John Cangialosi, a meteorologist with U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami. “It’s difficult to say where it will be, but in three days we’re projecting it anywhere from the eastern gulf near the Florida panhandle to the western Bahamas.”
About 400 miles of the Florida coast was under a hurricane watch from New Smyrna Beach southward on the east coast and from Chokoloskee southward on the west coast. The Keys were put under a watch Sunday.
‘Take this storm very seriously’
“I don’t want anyone to overly focus on the downgrading. ... It has a good chance to regain hurricane status,” said Max Mayfield, director of the hurricane center.
Bush urged Florida residents to make preparations and not wait until the storm is upgraded. It’s a familiar theme, considering seven hurricanes have hit Florida and one has brushed by in the past two years.
“My suggestion: Take this storm very seriously,” said Bush, urging people to have 72 hours worth of supplies. “A hurricane is a hurricane.”
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