San Francisco Chronicle

TROPICAL STORM LANE Assessment teams begin to survey damage

- By Jennifer Sinco Kelleher Jennifer Sinco Kelleher is an Associated Press writer.

HONOLULU — Tropical Storm Lane ranks as the second-biggest rainmaker from a tropical cyclone in the United States since 1950.

Lane dumped 52.02 inches of rain on Mountain View, Hawaii, from Wednesday through Sunday, the National Weather Service said Monday. The highest total was 60.58 inches, measured in Nederland, Texas, during Hurricane Harvey in 2017.

Lane broke the Hawaii tropical cyclone rainfall record, the weather service said. The previous Hawaii record was 52 inches measured during Hurricane Hiki in 1950.

It’s still too early to quantify the extent of the damage, but it runs the gamut from flooded homes to washed-out roads, said Kelly Wooten, spokeswoma­n for the Hawaii County Civil Defense Agency.

“We don’t really have any numbers or statistics back yet,” she said.

Assessment teams began surveying the damage Sunday.

The storm caused damage mostly on the Big Island, where rivers raged near Hilo and nearly 40 people had to be rescued from homes.

There were no deaths from the storm, which had the potential to cause much more destructio­n.

About 200 people have called to report damage, mostly on the east side of the Big Island, county Managing Director Wil Okabe said.

“What we’re concerned about is the mold — when it goes into the drywall, the rug, stuff like that,” Okabe said.

The storm named Lane was barreling toward the Hawaiian Islands as a powerful Category 5 hurricane in the middle of the week. But then it slowed down, moving as slow as 2 mph at times.

While it slowed, the storm’s outer bands hovered over the east side of the Big Island, allowing Lane to drop 51.53 inches of rain, the National Weather Service said Monday.

On Sunday, state Sen. Kai Kahele surveyed flood damage at Waiakea Elementary School in Hilo on the Big Island. Six classrooms for preschool, special education and kindergart­en students flooded, and the smell of mildew was settling in, he said.

“I think it’s reflective of what you see all over east Hawaii,” he said. “Four feet of water in three days overwhelme­d even the best infrastruc­ture and the best storm drains and plans.”

The entire state was under a flash-flood watch through Tuesday. Kauai and northwest Big Island were under a flash-flood warning.

 ?? Mario Tama / Getty Images ?? A resident carries his bodyboard through floodwater­s on the Big Island in Hilo. Tropical Storm Lane ranks as the second-biggest rainmaker from a tropical cyclone in the U.S. since 1950.
Mario Tama / Getty Images A resident carries his bodyboard through floodwater­s on the Big Island in Hilo. Tropical Storm Lane ranks as the second-biggest rainmaker from a tropical cyclone in the U.S. since 1950.

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