The Peterborough Examiner

Hawaii braces for Hurricane Lane

Category 4 storm may hit land Thursday

- JENNIFER SINCO KELLEHER Associated Press writer Dan Joling in Anchorage, Alaska, contribute­d to this report.

HONOLULU — Hawaii residents rushed to stores to stock up on bottled water, ramen, toilet paper and other supplies as they faced the threat of heavy rain, flash flooding and high surf as a hurricane churned toward the state.

The National Weather Service said Wednesday that Hurricane Lane had weakened to a Category 4 hurricane, but those hurricanes with winds of more than 209 km/h or above can still cause catastroph­ic damage.

More weakening was predicted, but the weather service said that “Lane is forecast to remain a dangerous hurricane as it draws closer to the Hawaiian Islands.”

The hurricane was about 804 kilometres southeast of Honolulu before dawn Wednesday and The National Weather Service extended a hurricane warning for Hawaii's Big Island to include the island of Maui.

Meteorolog­ist Melissa Dye, shortly before 5:30 a.m. Wednesday, said the hurricane was 515 kilometres southeast of Hilo and moving north-northwest at about 15 km/h.

“We are starting to see some of the rain show up on the Big Island radar,” she said. Offshore buoys also had detected wave action associated with the storm.

The weather service in a special statement said tropicalst­orm-force winds could begin as early as Wednesday afternoon or evening on the Big Island.

A hurricane watch remained in effect for Oahu and other smaller islands, meaning tropical-storm-force winds, excessive rain and large swells could arrive starting Wednesday.

There's uncertaint­y to Lane's path, said meteorolog­ist Gavin Shigesato.

“It is much too early to confidentl­y determine which, if any, of the main Hawaiian islands will be directly impacted by Lane,” the weather service said.

But the hurricane centre said the storm will move very close to or over the islands from Thursday through Saturday. Even if the centre of Lane doesn’t make landfall, the islands could be walloped with rain and wind.

Public schools on the Big Island and in Maui County were closed Wednesday until further notice.

Hawaii Gov. David Ige is allowing non-essential state employees on the Big Island and Maui to go on administra­tive leave from Wednesday to Friday as Hurricane Lane approaches. Employees on Hawaii and Maui islands who work in disaster response, as well as in hospitals and prisons, are required to report to their jobs, the governor said.

Longtime Hawaii residents recalled a devastatin­g 1992 hurricane as they prepared for Hurricane Lane.

Kauai resident Mike Miranda was 12 when Hurricane Iniki devastated the island 26 years ago.

"A lot of people are comparing the similariti­es between Iniki and Lane," he said.

Iniki's turn into the islands was sudden, he recalled.

“I remember how very little rain fell. But I remember the wind being the strongest force of nature I’ve ever witnessed and probably the scariest sounds I’ve ever heard in my life,” he said.

Utility poles were down all over the island, and his seventh-grade classes were held in Army tents for several months.

Miranda said his family is used to preparing for hurricane season.

“A lot of people who moved here and never experience­d a hurricane, they’re the ones rushing to the store,” he said.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This satellite image from the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion Wednesday shows Hurricane Lane south of Hawaii. The National Weather Service expects Lane to move very close to over Hawaii soon.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS This satellite image from the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion Wednesday shows Hurricane Lane south of Hawaii. The National Weather Service expects Lane to move very close to over Hawaii soon.

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