Chicago Sun-Times

‘ WE CAN’T SAVE YOU,’ FLORIDA GOVERNOR WARNS

After mangling islands, storm takes aim for U. S. mainland

- Doyle Rice, Trevor Hughes and Doug Stanglin Hurricane Irma flung rubble around Orient Bay on the Caribbean island of Saint Martin.

KEY WEST, FLA. Hurricane Irma, blowing Category 5 winds, moved within striking distance of south Florida, where residents boarded up homes, grabbed dwindling supplies of bottled water and battled fuel shortages as evacuees sought to get out of harm’s way.

Irma, the most powerful Atlantic storm ever, left a trail of death and destructio­n across the Caribbean as it howled past Puerto Rico and Hispaniola on a steady course toward the U. S. mainland.

The National Hurricane Center issued a hurricane watch for south Florida.

Forecaster­s waited for the storm to get closer before issuing a formal hurricane warning and designatin­g a likely path for landfall, but they warned that Irma could slam head- on into the Miami metropolit­an area of 6 million people and roar through the state’s Atlantic coast into Georgia and South Carolina.

Officials issued evacuation orders for tens of thousands of people in the Florida Keys and in exposed or low- lying parts of the Miami- Fort Lauderdale area.

“Leave the Keys, and get out,” Florida Gov. Rick Scott said Thursday. “We can’t save you once the storm hits.”

Approachin­g the mainland, Irma’s sustained winds eased slightly — from 185 mph to 175 mph — but remained a full- force, Category 5 storm as it chewed through a string of Caribbean islands.

As Florida braced for the storm’s arrival, Scott called Irma “powerful and deadly” and said the state’s biggest problem was fuel availabili­ty for people who had not left.

State and federal officials waived regulation­s to speed up delivery of fuel from Florida ports and neighborin­g states, he said. “We know fuel is very important,” he said. “We are devoting every state resource to addressing this.”

He said police escorted fuel delivery trucks in some areas to help speed them through traffic snarls.

He urged evacuees to take only what they needed.

Scott said the state would provide transport for those who do not have enough fuel to get out.

“This is not just a storm you can sit and wait through,” he said.

Scott warned that Irma would be stronger and larger than Hurricane Andrew, the Category 5 storm that killed 65 people in Florida, destroyed more than 63,500 homes and caused $ 26.5 billion in damage in 1992.

At least 10 people have been killed by Irma, and authoritie­s struggled to get aid to the hardest hit islands.

Authoritie­s expected the death toll to rise.

Barbuda’s prime minister, Gaston Browne, called the island “barely habitable,” and parts of St. Martin, an island split between French and Dutch control, were destroyed.

Communicat­ion with areas hit by Irma has been difficult, and informatio­n on damage trickled out.

The British government described the situation in Anguilla as “critical.”

French Interior Minister Gerard Collomb told France Info radio that the toll on St. Martin and St. Barthélemy would probably climb.

Rescue teams hadn’t finished their inspection of the islands.

Collomb said 100,000 food rations have been sent to the islands, the equivalent of four days’ worth.

“It’s a tragedy, we’ll need to rebuild both islands,” he said. “Most of the schools have been destroyed.”

Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said there are no reports of casualties on the Dutch side of St. Martin, but he noted that the damage was severe, and there was “wide- scale destructio­n of infrastruc­ture, houses and businesses.”

“There is no power, no gasoline, no running water,” Rutte said. “Houses are under water, cars are floating through the streets, inhabitant­s are sitting in the dark, in ruined houses and are cut off from the outside world.”

On Puerto Rico, more than half of the island was without power, leaving 900,000 in the dark and nearly 50,000 without water, the U. S. territory’s emergency management agency said.

In Fort Myers, Fla., police reported traffic congestion caused by people buying plywood and other storm supplies.

 ?? LIONEL CHAMOISEAU, AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ??
LIONEL CHAMOISEAU, AFP/ GETTY IMAGES
 ?? USA TODAY ?? SOURCE NOAA, Weather Undergroun­d ( As of 8 p. m. ET, Sept. 7)
USA TODAY SOURCE NOAA, Weather Undergroun­d ( As of 8 p. m. ET, Sept. 7)

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