Irma strengthens, targets islands
Forecasters warn residents of Gulf, East coasts to prepare now
While it’s still too early to predict an exact track for Hurricane Irma, forecasters have a message for residents of the East and Gulf coasts: Start preparing now.
Hurricane warnings were issued Monday for portions of the Leeward Islands, while a hurricane watch is in effect for Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Florida Gov. Rick Scott declared a state of emergency Monday evening for every county as the state braced for a possible strike.
Irma became a powerful Category 4 storm with 130-mph winds — Harvey level — and it was expected to intensify even more in the next day or two. “It could go through quickly or slowly,” AccuWeather meteorologist Dave Samuhel said. “We’re not sure.”
Still, he suggests people in the potential line of the storm take action. “Have emergency supplies ready,” he says.
The Weather Channel says the storm could hit Hispaniola, the Turks and Caicos, Cuba and the Bahamas later in the week. It could potentially hit Florida by the weekend, Samuhel says, although it’s too far out to map an exact path.
Irma could bring “deteriorating and perhaps devastating conditions “across the Leeward Islands and is showing the classic characteristics of a hurricane — vertical wind shear, deep moist unstable air and warm water, AccuWeather warned Monday.
AccuWeather says to expect widespread power outages and damage to trees and structures in areas where the eye of the storm passes directly over or makes its closest approach.
On the island of Puerto Rico, Irma could deliver flooding rain and damaging winds as well as potential mudslides, AccuWeather says. About 4 to 8 inches of rain is expected on the island.
Meanwhile, Hurricane Harvey is now out of the U.S., and in Canada, Samuhel says. “Good riddance.”