The Denver Post

Waist-deep flooding in Hilo as hurricane inundates Big Island

Up to 35 inches fell in 48 hours; storm to turn west Saturday

- By Jennifer Sinco Kelleher and Audrey Mcavoy

Hurricane Lane dumped torrential rains that hammered the main town on Hawaii’s Big Island as people elsewhere stocked up on supplies and piled sandbags to shield oceanfront businesses against the increasing­ly violent surf.

The city of Hilo, population 43,000, was flooded with waist-high water. The National Guard and firefighte­rs rescued six people and a dog from a flooded home, while five California tourists were rescued from another home.

Ben Mitchell, who moved from Washington state to an isolated and rural area of the Big Island eight months ago, said he had never seen so much rain.

“It was like waterfalls coming off my roof,” he said of Thursday’s downpours.

Rain blew into his windows, and his “whole driveway is underwater,” Mitchell said, adding that the rain was tapering off Friday.

As much as 35 inches fell on the island in 48 hours. Crews responded to landslides that shut down roads.

Closures “seem to be changing by the minute,” said Hawaii County Civil Defense spokeswoma­n Kelly Wooten. “They get cleaned up, and there’s another landslide somewhere else.”

The Category 2 storm was expected to turn west on Saturday before reaching the islands and skirting Oahu — the state’s most populated island. Even without making a direct hit, the system threatened to bring huge storm surge, high wind and heavy rain, forecaster­s said.

In an odd twist, some residents in a shelter on Maui had to flee when a brush fire got too close. A woman got burns on her hands and legs and was flown to Honolulu, Maui County spokesman Rod Antone said.

A man posted a video on Instagram showing flames several stories high starting to envelop parked cars. Josh Galinato said he was trying to sleep when he smelled smoke in his apartment in the tourist town of Lahaina.

 ?? Hollyn Johnson, Hawaii Tribune-Herald ?? People watch from the Puueo Street bridge as the Wailuku River rages below them in Hilo, Hawaii.
Hollyn Johnson, Hawaii Tribune-Herald People watch from the Puueo Street bridge as the Wailuku River rages below them in Hilo, Hawaii.

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