Baltimore Sun Sunday

Weaker storm leaves at least 10 dead in U.S.

Rain, floods swamp parts of Southeast in hurricane’s path

- By Bruce Smith and Russ Bynum

CHARLESTON, S.C. — A weakening Hurricane Matthew lashed Georgia and the Carolinas on Saturday in what appeared to be the last leg of its march up the East Coast, leaving in its wake millions of Americans relieved that one of the most fearsome storms on record in the U.S. was less bad than feared.

The hurricane was blamed for at least 10 U.S. deaths, including that of a 68-year-old Georgia man who died when two trees fell on his home. The death toll stood at 470 in Haiti, but it is expected to rise.

In many places along the Southeast coast, the damage consisted mostly of flooded streets, blown-down signs and awnings, flattened trees and power outages.

As the storm passed and the skies cleared, many people were already cleaning up, reopening their businesses or hitting the beach. The power started coming back on. And all three major theme parks in Orlando, Fla., including Walt Disney World, were up and running.

“We are all blessed that Matthew stayed off our coast,” Florida Gov. Rick Scott said. “We are blessed that we didn’t have a direct hit.”

On Saturday, Matthew sideswiped two of the South’s oldest and most historic cities — Savannah, Ga., and Charleston, S.C. — and also brought torrential rain and stiff wind to places like Myrtle Beach, S.C., and Wilmington, N.C.

From there, it was expected to veer out to sea, lose steam and loop back around toward the Bahamas and Florida, too feeble to cause any trouble.

For nearly its entire run up the coast from Florida, Matthew hung just far enough offshore that communitie­s did not feel the full force of its winds.

Its eye finally blew ashore just north of Charleston on Saturday, but only briefly. And by that time, Matthew was just barely a hurricane, with winds of 75 mph.

Within an hour of residents being allowed to return Saturday to Jacksonvil­le Beach, Fla., David Villmow had fired up the two pizza ovens at his beachfront restaurant, The Art of Pizza. He was hoping to start serving customers in a few hours.

“We got really lucky,” he said. “We could be looking at a whole lot worse. All you see are downed signs, downed fences, a few gas station sign letters missing.”

An estimated 2 million people in the Southeast were ordered to evacuate their homes as Matthew closed in. By hugging the coast, the storm pretty much behaved as forecaster­s predicted. A shift of just 20 or 30 miles could have meant widespread devastatio­n.

“People got incredibly lucky,” Colorado State University meteorolog­y professor Phil Klotzbach. “It was a super close call.”

While Matthew’s wind speed had dropped considerab­ly by the time it hit the Southeast coast, the storm will still go down as one of the most potent hurricanes on record, based on such factors as wind energy and longevity, and one of the most long-lived major hurricanes, too.

It was a major hurricane — that is, with winds of at least 110 mph — for 7.25 days. The storm swamped the streets of Savannah, a historic town of moss-draped squares and antebellum mansions. A homeless woman was seen staggering through waters up to her neck. She made it across safely.

A Coast Guard helicopter crew also rescued a man stranded on a sailboat in a river near Georgia’s Tybee Island. And North Carolina officials said they had to rescue numerous people from cars and homes.

Three-quarters of a million people in South Carolina were left without electricit­y, and 250,000 were in the dark in coastal Georgia. About 1 million people in Florida lost power.

Four deaths were blamed on the storm in Florida, three in Georgia and three in North Carolina. The deaths included an elderly Florida couple who died from carbon monoxide fumes while running a generator in their garage and two women who were killed when trees fell on a home and a camper.

The streets of Charleston — a city of handsome preCivil War homes, church steeples and romantic carriage rides — were also flooded.

“I feel badly for a lot of the businesses downtown that have been closed since Wednesday,” said Leigh Webber, who watched from her porch in the city’s historic district she added. “I noticed a lot of hotels were completely closed. I know some weddings were canceled, and it was a huge financial loss for a lot of people.”

Property data firm CoreLogic had projected the storm would cause $4 billion to $6 billion in insured losses.

 ?? MICHAEL PRONZATO/THE POST AND COURIER ?? Residents wade through flooded streets Saturday after Hurricane Matthew sideswiped Charleston, S.C. The storm is expected to move out to sea and may loop back into Florida.
MICHAEL PRONZATO/THE POST AND COURIER Residents wade through flooded streets Saturday after Hurricane Matthew sideswiped Charleston, S.C. The storm is expected to move out to sea and may loop back into Florida.

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