USA TODAY International Edition

Hurricane Willa roars into Mexico with 120 mph winds

- Contributi­ng: Dawn Gilbertson, USA TODAY; The Associated Press John Bacon and Doyle Rice

Hurricane Willa made landfall Tuesday night on the west-central coast of Mexico as a strong Category 3 storm with winds of 120 mph, bringing lifethreat­ening rain. The storm, which had briefly reached Category 5 status Monday, arrived around 9 p.m. EDT near Isla del Bosque, Sinola, about 60 miles south-southeast of the popular beach resort city of Mazatlan. “Willa is expected to be a dangerous major hurricane when it reaches the coast of Mexico,” the National Hurricane Center warned. The hurricane was forecast to produce an “extremely dangerous” storm surge along some portions of the coast of southweste­rn Mexico in southern Sinaloa and Nayarit, especially just south of where the center of Willa is expected to make landfall, the hurricane center said. Near the coast, the surge will be accompanie­d by “large and destructiv­e” waves. Willa is expected to produce total rainfall accumulati­ons of 6 to 12 inches. Local amounts to 18 inches are possible across portions of western Jalisco, western Nayarit, southern Sinaloa and far southern Durango in Mexico. “This rainfall will cause life-threatenin­g flash flooding and landslides,” the hurricane center said. Willa was forecast to weaken rapidly as it moved inland, likely becoming a tropical storm or tropical depression during the day Wednesday. Still, as it slides inland, Willa is expected to produce rainfall amounts of 1 to 3 inches across the rest of Durango and portions of Zacateca, southeast Chihuahua and Coahuila; local amounts to 5 inches are possible. Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto said he ordered the National Emergency Committee to take the “necessary preventive measures to safeguard the population” in the path of the storm.

Authoritie­s rushed to evacuate lowlying areas and set up shelters amid a stretch of high-rise resorts, surfing beaches and fishing villages. Southwest Airlines issued a travel advisory for travelers headed to and from two major destinatio­ns for U.S. tourists – Cabo San Lucas, on the southern tip of Baja California, and Puerto Vallarta in Jalisco. Southwest and American were allowing

Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto ordered the National Emergency Committee to take the “necessary preventive measures to safeguard the population.”

passengers booked through Friday to change flights without penalty if they want to wait for the storm to pass. Workers taped up windows in hotels and officials ordered schools closed in a low-lying region where towns sit amid farmland tucked between the sea and lagoons. A decree of “extraordin­ary emergency” was issued for 19 municipali­ties in Nayarit and Sinaloa states, the federal Interior Department announced. Officials said 7,000 to 8,000 people were being evacuated from low-lying areas, mostly in Sinaloa state, Nayarits’ heavily populated southern neighbor. Enrique Moreno, mayor of Escuinapa, a municipali­ty of about 30,000 in Sinaloa, said officials were trying to evacuate everybody in the seaside village of Teacapan. He estimated 3,000 were affected but he expected some would try to stay. “The people don’t want to evacuate, but it’s for their security,” he said. About 60 miles up the coast in Mazatlan, with a metropolit­an-area population of about 500,000, Mayor Jose Joel Bouciegzue said officials prepared shelters and were closely monitoring low-lying areas. Mazatlan is a popular vacation spot and home to a large number of American and Canadian expatriate­s. Since the track of the storm is across northern Mexico, Willa is unlikely to have a major impact on the migrant caravan marching through the far southern part of the nation, roughly 1,000 miles away from where the storm hits. AccuWeathe­r meteorolog­ist Steve Travis said the 7,000-strong migrant caravan making its way north through Mexico to the U.S. border was likely too far east to feel direct effects of the storm. If the migrants take the shortest route, toward Texas, they could see some rain, he said. “If they take a western track and head for the California border, they will have to deal with what the storm left behind,” Travis told USA TODAY. “They will move through wind damage, and washed-out roads are certainly a likelihood.” Farther to the south, a weakening Tropical Storm Vicente dissipated over the state of Michoacan Tuesday, after killing at least 12 people in flooding and mudslides. Remnants of the storm could still dump up to 10 inches of rain over portions of southweste­rn Mexico, potentiall­y triggering dangerous flash floods.

 ?? DANIEL SLIM/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A man works to protect a restaurant from Hurricane Willa on Monday, before it was to hit Mazatlan, Mexico.
DANIEL SLIM/AFP/GETTY IMAGES A man works to protect a restaurant from Hurricane Willa on Monday, before it was to hit Mazatlan, Mexico.

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