Chattanooga Times Free Press

Hurricane Andrew was a monster, but Irma has the potential to blow it out of the water

- BY SETH BORENSTEIN

WASHINGTON — For a generation in South Florida, Hurricane Andrew was the monster storm that reshaped a region. Irma is likely to blow that out of the water.

Bigger and with a 90-degree different path of potential destructio­n, Irma is expected to hit more people and buildings than 1992’s Andrew, experts said.

At the time, Andrew was the most costly hurricane in U.S. history, with damages of $26.5 billion in 1992 dollars, according to the National Weather Service.

“The effect of Irma on the state of Florida is going to be much greater than Andrew’s effect,” said Weather Channel senior hurricane specialist Bryan Norcross, who was hailed as a hero during Andrew.

“We’re dealing with an entirely different level of phenomenon. There is no storm to compare with this. Unless you go way back to 1926.”

Kate Hale, Miami-Dade’s emergency management chief — who grabbed national attention during Andrew by beseeching “Where the hell is the cavalry on this one?” — said by nearly every measure Irma looks far worse.

“Nobody can make this up. This storm. This track at this point,” Hale told The Associated Press on Thursday. Between Hurricane Harvey’s record weeklong flooding, devastatin­g Western wildfires and Irma, which was nearing record-levels for the longest time at Category 5 strength, she called the effects on the national economy “potentiall­y staggering.”

Both Andrew and Irma started as wisps of unstable weather off Africa and chugged across the Atlantic as ever-intensifyi­ng Cape Verde storms. And while they may both end up in the same general area, meteorolog­ists said that’s where the similariti­es disappear.

Andrew a quarter century ago was an unusually compact major storm that roared east-to-west almost in a straight line and hit just south of the core of Miami. Months after its August 23, 1992, landfall, meteorolog­ists upgraded it to a Category 5 hurricane with 167 mph winds at one point and 17-foot storm surge in another. The storm killed 65 people, according to the National Hurricane Center’s report.

Andrew’s hurricane-force winds were only about 30 miles wide and so was its swath of utter destructio­n.

It was like “an incredible buzz saw giant tornado of a hurricane that hit metropolit­an Southeast Florida,” Norcross said. Yet outside that area, damage was minimal, more like a Category 1 storm.

And the place it hit with its massive winds was on the southern tip of Dade County and any place else would have caused far more damage, Norcross and Hale said.

“As bad as it was, it was as good as it could have been,” Norcross said.

Andrew’s path also took it straight out of South Florida at relatively high speeds of about 18 mph.

The National Hurricane Center’s forecast path for Irma is from the south, hitting Miami and perhaps its highly developed and expensive central region, then up through affluent Broward and Palm Beach counties and further north, threatenin­g the entire peninsula instead of just its tip.

For disaster officials trying to rescue people and clean up, that’s a big difference.

“Everything north of us was functionin­g and safe,” said Hale, now an emergency manager in Virginia. “This time everything north of them is going to be in bad shape as well.”

Andrew intensifie­d to a Category 5 hurricane just before hitting land, while Irma has been a Category 5 storm for days and is forecast to fluctuate in intensity in the next couple of days and could hit as a strong Category 4. But forecasts of a weakening storm are somewhat iffy, meteorolog­ists said.

Another huge factor is Andrew was so small, while Irma already is a normal size storm and likely to grow bigger with up to 100 miles wide of Category 5 hurricane force winds, triple Andrew’s girth, according to Jeff Masters, meteorolog­y director at the private Weather Undergroun­d.

Irma “is going over a much bigger population,” Masters said. “Andrew missed like four-fifths of the Miami-Dade population centers.”

About 1.9 million people lived in Miami-Dade County when Andrew hit. Now about 6 million people live in South Florida’s three counties and another 4 million people live in threatened Orlando and Jacksonvil­le.

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