Austin American-Statesman

Monster Hurricane Irma targets Florida

Powerful Atlantic storm kills 2 in islands as ferocious 185 mph winds pummel Caribbean.

- By Les Neuhaus and Laura King Los Angeles Times

Floridians ST. PETERSBURG, FLA. — hit the highways, scrambled for scarce supplies and hammered plywood over windows as a monster hurricane made landfall in the Caribbean early Wednesday, setting a wild, wind-churned course toward Puerto Rico, with the U.S. mainland in its sights, likely over the weekend.

The storm claimed its first fatalities, according to French officials, who reported two deaths and two serious injuries in the French-administer­ed island territorie­s of St. Martin and St. Barthelemy, popularly known as St. Barts.

Hurricane Irma, one of the most powerful Atlantic hurricanes ever, wreaked havoc on a string of small islands with drenching rainfall and howling 185 mph winds on its track toward South Florida, where Gov. Rick Scott begged residents to obey calls to flee the storm’s path when the time comes.

“I cannot stress this enough — do not ignore evacuation orders,” Scott said at a news briefing as the storm began lashing Puerto Rico with rain. “If you’re told to evacuate, don’t wait — get out quickly.”

In warning of the dangers, the governor invoked Hurricane Andrew, which devastated Florida a quarter-century ago, causing massive destructio­n and kill-

ing nearly 50 people.

“I want everybody to understand the importance of this — this is bigger than Andrew,” Scott told ABC News.

President Donald Trump declared states of emergency in Florida, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Florida began activating its National Guard, with 7,000 members told to report for duty Friday.

In Fort Myers, in coastal Southwest Florida, Stephanie Matteson was in line at a gas station, where she said she had been waiting for 25 minutes.

“I swear, it’s like everyone is in a hurry to get this thing over with — like, ‘Just come on, Irma, and then leave us alone,’” said Matteson, 47.

She said she experience­d Hurricane Wilma in 2005, “but Irma’s got more punch, from what they’re saying.”

There was a run on supplies from bananas to batteries. Anthony Bonner, a bread company distributo­r, predicted that the 28 racks of bread he was delivering to a picked-over Walmart in Coral Cove, outside Fort Myers, would go fast.

“It’s kind of like I’m the candy man wherever I show up,” he said. “Bread and water are always the first to go. Stand here for 15 minutes — all of this will be gone.”

A state of emergency was declared earlier for all 67 Florida counties; on Wednesday, South Carolina followed suit, with Gov. Henry McMaster urging the public to not leave storm preparatio­ns for the last moment. Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal issued a state of emergency for his state’s coastal counties.

As he did while Hurricane Harvey pounded Texas late last month, Trump tweeted about the strength of the storm, which could threaten his own Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Fla.

“Hurricane looks like the largest ever recorded in the Atlantic!” he wrote Wednesday morning on Twitter.

The president also said his emergency management team was ready in Florida, adding: “No rest for the weary!”

Later, heading into a meeting with congressio­nal leaders, he described the epic storm as “something that could be not good — believe me, not good.”

The National Hurricane Center said the storm was one of the five most powerful Atlantic hurricanes in the last 80 years and the strongest Atlantic storm on record outside the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea.

Satellite imagery of the enormous storm inspired fear and awe. The hurricane center in Miami described a vast swirling mass, with hurricane-force winds extending 50 miles from the storm’s center.

The hurricane’s force was such that it was detected by earthquake-measuring equipment on islands it passed, said Stephen Hicks, a seismologi­st at Britain’s University of Southampto­n.

Before dawn Wednesday, the tiny Caribbean nation of Barbuda and Antigua was pummeled by wind and rain as the top-scale Category 5 storm passed almost directly above the islands, tearing off roofs, uprooting trees and triggering floods. Many people sought safety in government shelters as the winds turned storm-borne debris into missiles. There were no known deaths.

“The Lord has protected us and we have been spared the worst of Irma,” tweeted Barbuda and Antigua’s prime minister, Gaston Browne.

Irma also roared through the French island territorie­s of Saint Martin and Saint Barthelemy, battering them with wind and water that smashed buildings and toppled trees. It was there that two deaths were reported by the French overseas territorie­s minister, Annick Girardin. She also said two people had suffered serious injuries.

Dutch authoritie­s were keeping an anxious eye on St. Maarten, Netherland­s territory that shares its island with St. Martin, after the storm disrupted communicat­ions and did heavy damage.

In the early afternoon, the eye passed over the British Virgin Islands with winds gusting at 110 mph, the National Hurricane Center reported. Celebrity tycoon Richard Branson, founder of the Virgin Group, owns a small private island in the chain, and blogged beforehand that he and a group of friends would be seeking shelter in a concrete wine cellar.

Six southern islands in the Bahamas were under evacuation orders, Prime Minister Hubert Minnis said, with people being flown to the capital, Nassau.

In Puerto Rico, lashed by the storm’s leading edge, people hunkered down as the hurricane menaced the U.S. territory. Gov. Ricardo Rossello said the storm’s danger was “like nothing we’ve ever seen.”

As the hurricane closed in, the world’s second-largest radio telescope at Puerto Rico’s Arecibo Observator­y suspended operations, its operators announced on Twitter.

With Puerto Rico’s infrastruc­ture already tottering amid a lengthy recession, islanders were bracing for a loss of power that could linger for weeks.

In the low-lying Florida Keys, where many people are accustomed to riding out hurricanes, mandatory evacuation orders were in effect for visitors and were extended to residents for later Wednesday — a complicate­d undertakin­g that was to include airlifting hospital patients.

Tourist idylls came to an abrupt halt as hotels shut down. The Key West airport, slated to halt operations Wednesday, later pushed back that deadline to Thursday.

Residents, with a few more hours’ grace to get out, boarded up homes and businesses, and secured their boats.

The only highway to the mainland — U.S. 1 — was choked with traffic. Gasoline got harder to find. The governor said by Wednesday afternoon that 25,000 people had fled the archipelag­o.

 ?? JOSE JIMENEZ / GETTY IMAGES ?? Debris from the passing of Hurricane Irma litters the ground Wednesday at Puerto Chico Harbor in Fajardo, Puerto Rico. Irma is forecast to strike the U.S. mainland.
JOSE JIMENEZ / GETTY IMAGES Debris from the passing of Hurricane Irma litters the ground Wednesday at Puerto Chico Harbor in Fajardo, Puerto Rico. Irma is forecast to strike the U.S. mainland.
 ?? AL DIAZ / MIAMI HERALD ?? Ben Cosme installs hurricane shutters Wednesday at Key Largo Chocolates in Key Largo, Fla., in preparatio­n for the arrival of Hurricane Irma.
AL DIAZ / MIAMI HERALD Ben Cosme installs hurricane shutters Wednesday at Key Largo Chocolates in Key Largo, Fla., in preparatio­n for the arrival of Hurricane Irma.

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