Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Maria flattens Puerto Rico

Official: ‘We’re going to find our island destroyed’

- By the Associated Press and Sun Sentinel staff

SAN JUAN, PUERTO

RICO – The strongest hurricane to hit Puerto Rico in more than 80 years destroyed hundreds of homes, knocked out power on the entire island and triggered heavy flooding Wednesday in an onslaught that could plunge the U.S. territory deeper into financial crisis.

Leaving at least nine people dead in its wake across the Caribbean, Hurricane Maria blew ashore in the morning in the southeast coastal town of Yabucoa as a Category 4 storm with winds of 155 mph.

It was expected to punish the island of 3.4 million people with life-threatenin­g winds for 12 to 24 hours.

“Once we’re able to go outside, we’re going to find our island destroyed,” warned Abner Gomez, Puerto Rico’s emergency management director. “The informatio­n we have received is not encouragin­g. It’s a system that has destroyed everything in its path.”

It was the second time in two weeks that Puerto Rico felt the wrath of a hurricane.

There were no immedi-

ate reports of any deaths or serious injuries on the island.

As people waited it out in shelters or took cover inside stairwells, bathrooms and closets, Maria brought down cell towers and power lines, snapped trees, tore off roofs and unloaded at least 20 inches of rain.

Widespread flooding was reported, with dozens of cars half-submerged in some neighborho­ods and many streets turned into rivers. People calling local radio stations reported that doors were being torn off their hinges and a water tank flew away.

Felix Delgado, mayor of the northern coastal city of Catano, told the Associated Press that 80 percent of the 454 homes in a neighborho­od known as Juana Matos were destroyed. The fishing community on San Juan Bay was hit with a storm surge of more than 4 feet, he said.

“Months and months and months and months are going to pass before we can recover from this,” he said.

As of 8 p.m., Maria had weakened into a Category 2 hurricane with winds of 110 mph. Its core was moving off Puerto Rico at 12 mph.

It was expected to pass off the northeaste­rn coast of the Dominican Republic late Wednesday and today.

Forecasts are still projecting Maria to travel north into the open Atlantic Ocean and avoid Florida and the U.S. East Coast. “A turn toward the northnorth­west is forecast on Friday,” according to an 8 p.m. advisory.

Even before the storm, Puerto Rico’s electrical grid was crumbling and the island was in dire condition financiall­y.

Puerto Rico is struggling to restructur­e a portion of its $73 billion debt, and the government has warned it is running out of money as it fights back against furloughs and other austerity measures imposed by a federal board overseeing the island’s finances.

Gov. Ricardo Rossello urged people to have faith: “We are stronger than any hurricane. Together, we will rebuild.”

He asked President Donald Trump to declare the island a disaster zone, a step that would open the way to federal aid.

Many people feared extended power outages would further sink businesses struggling amid a recession that has lasted more than a decade.

“This is going to be a disaster,” said Jean Robert Auguste, who owns two French restaurant­s and sought shelter at a San Juan hotel. “We haven’t made any money this month.”

More than 11,000 people — and more than 580 pets — were in shelters, authoritie­s said.

Along the island’s northern coast, an emergency medical station in the town of Arecibo lost its roof, while communicat­ion was severed with several emergency management posts. A hospital and a police station reported broken windows, and a tree fell on an ambulance.

Maria posed no immediate threat to the U.S. mainland. The long-range forecast showed the storm out in the Atlantic Ocean hundreds of miles off the Georgia-South Carolina coast by Monday morning.

Previously a Category 5 with 175 mph winds, Maria was even stronger than Hurricane Irma when Irma roared into the Florida Keys this month.

Irma sideswiped Puerto Rico on Sept. 6, causing no deaths or widespread damage on the island but leaving more than 1 million people without electricit­y. More than 70,000 still had no power as Maria approached.

The last Category 4 hurricane to blow ashore in Puerto Rico was in 1932, and the strongest ever to hit the island was San Felipe in 1928, with winds of 160 mph.

As Maria closed in, Trump offered his support via Twitter: “Puerto Rico being hit hard by new monster Hurricane. Be careful, our hearts are with you — will be there to help!”

The storm’s center passed near or over St. Croix overnight Tuesday, prompting U.S. Virgin Islands Gov. Kenneth Mapp to warn people to sleep in their street clothes and shoes just in case. St. Croix was largely spared by Irma.

There were no immediate reports of deaths or injuries on St. Croix, but it was still too dangerous Wednesday to venture out and conduct a thorough check, said Nykole Tyson, a spokeswoma­n at the U.S. Virgin Islands Emergency Operations Center.

On the island of Dominica, which got slammed late Monday, Hartley Henry, an adviser to the prime minister, reported at least seven deaths and a “tremendous loss of housing and public buildings.” He said the country was “in a daze,” with no electricit­y and little to no communicat­ions.

Dominica’s airport and seaports remained closed, and authoritie­s used helicopter­s to carry emergency food, water and shelter materials to the island, said Ronald Jackson, head of the Caribbean Disaster and Emergency Management Agency.

 ?? PHOTOS BY RICARDO ARDUENGO/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A woman pulls a trash can past a destroyed home as Hurricane Maria hits Fajardo. “It’s a system that has destroyed everything in its path,” a government official said.
PHOTOS BY RICARDO ARDUENGO/AFP/GETTY IMAGES A woman pulls a trash can past a destroyed home as Hurricane Maria hits Fajardo. “It’s a system that has destroyed everything in its path,” a government official said.
 ??  ?? A man rescues a rooster from his flooded garage as Hurricane Maria hits Fajardo, Puerto Rico, on Wednesday.
A man rescues a rooster from his flooded garage as Hurricane Maria hits Fajardo, Puerto Rico, on Wednesday.

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