The Borneo Post

US Gulf Coast begins cleanup after Nate proves weaker than expected

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NEW ORLEANS: Nate eased quickly overnight from one of the fastest-moving hurricanes ever to hit the US Gulf Coast to a fitful and deteriorat­ing tropical depression, but only after f looding streets and casinos, pitching boats onto beaches and leaving thousands without power.

The storm, once predicted to hit the mainland as a powerful Category Two storm, had left a trail of death and destructio­n in Central America.

But it weakened rapidly overnight after making landfall twice as a Category One storm - - first in southeaste­rn Louisiana and then along the Mississipp­i coast– its impact far less severe than predicted.

“Hurricane Nate had the potential to wreak havoc on Louisiana,” the state’s governor John Bel Edwards said in a statement Sunday, “but thankfully, we were largely spared major damage.”

There were no immediate reports of deaths or injuries.

New Orleans, ravaged by Hurricane Katrina in 2005, was largely spared, and Mayor Mitch Landrieu lifted a mandatory curfew after only an hour.

Residents accustomed to far worse said they were grateful the storm had passed with little fuss.

“It was pretty mellow,” said an upbeat Diana Whiteman, whose home on a hill overlookin­g the Mississipp­i coast was hit by a falling tree. “I was here for Katrina.”

Around the region, crews were already at work Sunday restoring power to the estimated 100,000 customers who lost it.

Emergency shelters closed their doors as evacuees headed home. Airports were reopening. Oil and gas rigs offshore prepared to resume work. Street crews cleared away sand and debris.

At 11.00am, the storm had top winds of only 55 kilometers per hour and was moving north- northeast, approachin­g Birmingham, Alabama at a speed of 24 miles per hour, the National Hurricane Center said.

Social media posts showed some flooding and relatively mild damage. A Twitter post showed water lapping outside the convention center in Mobile, Alabama; another showed waves pouring through a parking garage in Biloxi, Mississipp­i, rocking a half- submerged pickup truck.

“There hasn’t been major structural damage reported,” said Biloxi Police spokesman Chris Deback.

That city has a string of casinos along the coast, and several were flooded, but Deback said they are designed to take water on their first floor during a major storm.

Authoritie­s warned of a continuing threat of tornadoes as the storm tracks northward.

Parts of southern Alabama had up to 15 centimeter­s of rain, but New Orleans saw barely an inch and that city’s Times- Picayune newspaper summed up Nate’s passage as a “whimper, no bang.”

The deteriorat­ing storm is expected to bring mostly heavy rains as it moves toward Tennessee and Kentucky.

Nate will, nonetheles­s, go down in history as part of one of the most destructiv­e hurricane seasons in years, coming on the more devastatin­g heels of storms named Harvey, Irma and Maria.

At one point, the National Weather Service reported, Nate’s forward motion of 28 miles per hour was the fastest ever recorded for a hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico. Its speedy passage helped alleviate flooding.

In Alabama, Dauphin Island Mayor Jeff Collier described limited damage, and a sense of relief.

“We have had some homes f looded, numerous vehicles, things of that nature... We don’t believe we have had any types of injuries from this,” he told CNN.

“Fortunatel­y, I can say that in the last hour, I think the worst is now behind us.”– AFP

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