Austin American-Statesman

Beryl’s remnants set to drench Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands

- By Danica Coto

Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands braced for heavy rains and strong winds Monday as remnants of the new season’s first hurricane provided an initial test of how far they’ve recovered from last year’s devastatin­g storms.

Tropical Storm Beryl disintegra­ted after rushing over Dominica and into the eastern Caribbean, but the U.S. National Hurricane Center said the remnants still could bring 2 to 3 inches of rain pounding down on homes still damaged by September’s Hurricane Maria. Forecaster­s said this could unleash flooding and land- slides in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

Outages were already reported across Puerto Rico early Monday as Gov. Ricardo Rossello urged people without sturdy roofs to move i n with relatives or go to one of 14 government shelters that have opened.

Some 60,000 people in the U.S. territory still have only tarps for roofs blown off by Maria, and more than 1,500 customers are still without power more than nine months after the storm.

The Category 5 hurricane caused more than an estimated $100 billion in damage, killed dozens of people by the most conservati­ve estimates and destroyed up to 75 percent of electricit­y transmissi­on lines.

The National Weather Service issued an alert warning that heavy showers and winds of more than 50 mph were approachin­g Puerto Rico’s east coast Monday morning. The storm’s center was expected to pass just south of the island.

The U.S. Virgin Islands, meanwhile, announced that schools and government offices would be closed in St. Croix.

Beryl, which had been the Atlantic season’s first hurricane, was losing tropical storm status late Sunday when it crossed Dominica, another island that had been battered by Hurricane Maria, which hit as a Category 5 storm and killed dozens of people.

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