Times Colonist

Hurricane weakens but pummels Hawaii with rain

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HONOLULU — Hurricane Lane unleashed torrents of rain and landslides that blocked roads on Hawaii’s mostly rural Big Island on Thursday as residents and tourists in the state’s biggest city braced for the dangerous storm to come their way.

Emergency workers rescued five people from a flooded house in Hilo after a nearby gulch overflowed, said Hawaii County Managing Director Wil Okabe. They weren’t injured and were taken to a shelter, he said.

On the state’s most populated island, about 320 kilometres north of the Big Island, employees of the Sheraton Waikiki resort filled sandbags to protect the Oahu oceanfront hotel from surging surf. Stores along Waikiki’s glitzy Kalakaua Avenue stacked sandbags along the bottom of their glass windows to prepare for heavy rain and flash flooding.

Hurricane Lane, which was still offshore, already lashed the Big Island with nearly 50 centimetre­s of rain in nearly 24 hours and was moving closer, putting it and Maui “in the thick” of the storm, National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Melissa Dye said. The agency said the storm has weakened to a Category 3 but can still cause major damage.

The hurricane, which was packing maximum sustained winds exceeding 190 kilometres an hour, was expected to move close to or over portions of the main islands by today, bringing dangerous surf six metres, forecaster­s said.

Lane was not projected to make a direct hit on the islands, but officials warned that even a lesser blow could do significan­t harm. Some areas could see up to 80 cm of rain.

“Rain has been nonstop for the last half hour or so, and winds are just starting to pick up,” said Pablo Akira Beimler, who lives on the coast in Honokaa on the Big Island.

“Our usually quiet stream is raging right now.”

Beimler, who posted videos of trees being blown sideways, said staying put is about the only choice he has. The road to Hilo was cut off due to landslides.

 ?? HOLLYN JOHNSON, AP ?? People stand near floodwater­s from Hurricane Lane in Hilo on Hawaii’s Big Island on Thursday.
HOLLYN JOHNSON, AP People stand near floodwater­s from Hurricane Lane in Hilo on Hawaii’s Big Island on Thursday.

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