Las Vegas Review-Journal

Isaias hits Florida, going north

East Coast could still get heavy rains from now-tropical storm

- By Wilfredo Lee and Dánica Coto The Associated Press

VERO BEACH, Fla. — Bands of heavy rain from Isaias lashed Florida’s east coast Sunday while officials dealing with surging cases of the coronaviru­s kept a close watch on the weakened tropical storm.

Isaias was downgraded from a hurricane to a tropical storm Saturday afternoon, but was still threatenin­g to bring heavy rain and flooding as it crawled just off Florida’s Atlantic coast.

“Don’t be fooled by the downgrade,” Florida Gov. Ron Desantis warned at a news conference after the storm spent hours roughing up the Bahamas.

Upper-level winds took much of the strength out of Isaias, said Stacy Stewart, senior hurricane specialist at the National Hurricane Center in Miami. The storm also slowed down considerab­ly.

“We were expecting a hurricane to develop and it didn’t,” Stewart said Sunday. “It’s a tale of two storms. If you live on the west side of the storm, you didn’t get much. If you live east of the storm, there’s a lot of nasty weather there.”

Florida is on the west side of Isaias. Authoritie­s closed beaches, parks and virus testing sites, lashing signs to palm trees so they wouldn’t blow away. Desantis said the state is anticipati­ng power outages and asked residents to have a week’s supply of water, food and medicine on hand. Officials wrestled with how to prepare shelters where people can seek refuge from the storm if necessary, while also safely social distancing to prevent the spread of the virus.

Isaias put another burden on communitie­s already hit by other storms and sickness.

In Palm Beach County, about 150 people were in shelters, said emergency management spokeswoma­n Lisa

De La Rionda. The county has a voluntary evacuation order for those living in mobile or manufactur­ed homes, or those who feel their home can’t withstand winds.

“We don’t anticipate many more evacuation­s,” she said, adding that the evacuees are physically distant from each other and are wearing masks, because of the virus.

The storm’s maximum sustained winds declined steadily throughout Saturday, and were at 65 mph at 2 p.m. EDT Sunday, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said.

The center of the storm was forecast to travel near the state’s eastern coast throughout the day, and fluctuatio­ns in strength are possible into Tuesday, forecaster­s said.

Heavy rain, flooding and high winds could batter much of the East Coast this week as the system is forecast to track up or just off the Atlantic seaboard.

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