Toronto Star

Carolinas brace as Florence arrives

Hurricane downgraded, but experts warn slow often proves disastrous

- JONATHAN DREW AND JEFFREY COLLINS

WILMINGTON, N.C.— The big slosh has begun, and the consequenc­es could be disastrous.

Hurricane Florence’s leading edge battered the Carolina coast Thursday, bending trees and shooting frothy sea water over streets on the Outer Banks, as the hulking storm closed in with 155 km/h winds for a drenching siege that could last all weekend. Tens of thousands were without power.

Winds and rain were arriving later in South Carolina, and a few people were still walking on the sand at Myrtle Beach while North Carolina was getting pounded. Heavy rainfall began after dark.

Forecaster­s said conditions will only get more lethal as the storm smashes ashore early Friday near the North Carolina-South Carolina line and crawls slowly inland. Its surge could cover all but a sliver of the Carolina coast under as much as 3.4 metres of ocean water, and days of downpours could unload more than 0.9 metres of rain, touching off severe flooding.

Florence’s winds weakened as it drew closer to land, dropping from a peak of 225 km/h earlier in the week, and the hurricane was downgraded from a terrify- ing Category 4 to a 2.

But North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper warned: “Don’t relax, don’t get complacent. Stay on guard. This is a powerful storm that can kill. Today the threat becomes a reality.” More than 80,000 people were already without power as the storm approached, and more than 12,000 were in shelters. Another 400 people were in shelters in Virginia, where forecasts were less dire.

Forecaster­s said that given the storm’s size and sluggish track, it could cause epic damage akin to what the Houston area saw during Hurricane Harvey just over a year ago, with floodwater­s swamping homes and businesses and washing over industrial waste sites and hog-manure ponds.

“It truly is really about the whole size of this storm,” National Hurricane Center director Ken Graham said. “The larg- er and the slower the storm is, the greater the threat and the impact — and we have that.”

As Florence drew near, U.S. President Donald Trump tweeted that the Federal Emergency Management Agency and first responders are “supplied and ready,” and he disputed the official conclusion that nearly 3,000 people died in Puerto Rico, claiming the figure was a Democratic plot to make him look bad.

Scientists said it is too soon to say what role, if any, global warming played in the storm. But previous research has shown that the strongest hurricanes are getting wetter, more intense and intensifyi­ng faster because of human-caused climate change.

 ??  ?? A boarded-up bar before the arrival of Hurricane Florence in Myrtle Beach, Fla., Thursday.
A boarded-up bar before the arrival of Hurricane Florence in Myrtle Beach, Fla., Thursday.

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