One
dead, transformer explodes, 500,000 lose power in Florida…no thanks to Mathew
Hurricane Matthew battered the Florida coast with
powerful winds, potentially devastating storm surges and torrential rain on Friday,
leaving hundreds of thousands without power as officials made last-minute
appeals for any remaining holdouts to get out of the storm's way.
Hurricane
Matthew claimed its first victim in the U.S. on Friday, as the St. Lucie
County, Florida Sheriff confirmed a person died overnight after emergency
officials could not get to them after suspending operations because of the
storm.
"This is a
big major hurricane that is just offshore and it is fully capable of producing
life threatening storm surge," Rick Knabb, Director of the National
Hurricane Center (NHC), told "Good Morning America," on Friday.
"If you are in an area that emergency managers told you to evacuate and
they’re telling you to go, you absolutely have to go now. Your life could
depend on it."
The
National Weather Service declared an extreme wind warning for Brevard County on
Friday morning as the western eye wall of the Category 3 storm brushed by Cape
Canaveral, home of the Kennedy Space Center, producing wind gusts in excess of
100 mph.
More than
500,000 people were already without power across Florida, although officials
said service was being restored in the southern part of the state.
As of 8
a.m. ET, Hurricane Matthew's center was 25 miles east-southeast of Daytona
Beach.
Meteorologists
warned of an imminent destructive storm surge.
"We
know from hurricane history that water takes nine out of ten lives in landfall
in the U.S." Knabb added. "Matthew is going to write some history.
The key here is you don’t want to be a part of it. I don’t want to be writing
up a report for the NHC that totals up the storm surge or the inland flooding
fatalities and you’re one of them."
The deadly
storm is projected to run parallel to the shore over the next two days,
producing a potentially devastating storm surge of up to 10 feet over some 500
miles of coast that stretches from central Florida up into South Carolina. The
potential for a destructive storm surge, coupled with up to 15 inches of rain
expected in isolated areas, has officials fearing catastrophic flooding.
Forecasters
in Jacksonville warned of "worst case storm surge scenario" and said
"if a direct impact occurs this will be unlike any hurricane in the modern
era."
"We’ve
been blessed that we haven’t had a direct hit," Florida Gov. Rick Scott
told GMA on Friday. "But as you know, with the hurricane force winds we’re
going to see a lot of storm surge. We’re
going to see a lot more storm surge than we’ve seen in the southern part of the
state so that’s my biggest concern right now," Scott added.
"If
you’re in the Jacksonville area, you still have about an hour to evacuate, so
do it if you have a chance to evacuate. I don’t want anybody to be around the
storm surge."
Yesterday,
Scott urged coastal residents to move to safe ground, warning, "This storm
will kill you."
Some 3.1
million people were told to evacuate in three states. The National Weather
Service in Jacksonville warned residents that "catastrophic damage"
is anticipated for coastal areas and areas along the St. John's River.
The
governors of Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina have declared
states of emergency. Officials in three of those states have urged coastal
residents to head inland as the most powerful Atlantic storm in more than a
decade continued on its path along the coast.
Hurricane
Matthew has caused major transportation disruptions for much of the U.S. Nearly
4,000 flights were canceled from Wednesday to Friday due to the storm's
dangerous winds. Amtrak suspended services in the southeast because of the
severe weather. No alternate transportation will be provided, the railroad
said.
Motorists
clogged highways, homeowners boarded up windows, and anxious shoppers lined up
at grocery stores and gas stations this week as they stocked up on emergency
supplies in the threatened coastal areas ahead of the storm.
Matthew's
forecast track showed the hurricane possibly weakening as it moved closer to the
Florida shoreline on Friday.
No other
Atlantic storm on record has packed such powerful winds for such a prolonged
period as Hurricane Matthew, ABC News meteorologists said.
More than
377,000 people were evacuated in Cuba as Hurricane Matthew approached the
Caribbean island earlier this week, according to the United Nations. And in
Haiti, at least 350,000 people are in need of immediate assistance. There were
reports of a powerful storm surge, violent winds and widespread flooding.
Culled from Yahoo
Culled from Yahoo
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