Daily Observer (Jamaica)

NWA TAKES CHARGE

State agency to undertake clean-up in aftermath of Tropical Storm Elsa

- BY BALFORD HENRY Senior staff reporter balfordh@jamaicaobs­erver.com

WITH last weekend’s escape from the worst of Tropical Storm Elsa, Prime Minister Andrew Holness has urged Members of Parliament (MP) to hold strain while the Government seeks funding to increase disaster mitigation efforts.

In a statement yesterday to the House of Representa­tives, Holness said that the National Works Agency (NWA) had already begun addressing some of the problems created by the flooding that occurred.

He said that the NWA, as is its mandate, had assumed the central role in the immediate aftermath of the tropical storm by mobilising equipment and personnel to clear blocked roads and restore temporary access to affected communitie­s. He said also that the agency had conducted rapid assessment at locations in which impact was observed and/or reported and added that, through its network of officers in the parishes, the NWA had conducted a preliminar­y assessment of damage and had undertaken work in order to

FLORIDA, United States (AP) — Tropical Storm Elsa gathered strength and was likely to become a hurricane before coming ashore in Florida, weather forecaster­s said yesterday.

The storm’s rains lashed the Caribbean and the Florida Keys and complicate­d the search for survivors in the deadly collapse of a Miami-area condominiu­m 12 days ago.

In addition to damaging winds and heavy rains, the Miamibased US National Hurricane Center warned of life-threatenin­g storm surges, flooding and isolated tornadoes. A hurricane warning has been issued for a long stretch of coastline, from Egmont Key at the mouth of Tampa Bay to the Steinhatch­ee River in Florida’s Big Bend area. Landfall was expected somewhere in between.

The Tampa area is highly vulnerable to storm surge because the offshore waters and Tampa Bay are quite shallow, experts say. Governor Ron Desantis said the area would take a hard hit from the storm overnight.

Now is “not a time to joyride” because “we do have hazardous conditions out there”, Desantis said at a news conference Tuesday. The storm is expected to make landfall between 8:00 am and 9:00 am today, he said.

Still, on the barrier island beach towns along the Gulf Coast, it was largely business as usual with few shutters or plywood boards going up early yesterday. Free sandbags were being handed out at several locations, and a limited number of storm shelters opened Tuesday morning in at least four counties around the Tampa Bay area, although no evacuation­s have been ordered.

Nancy Brindley, 85, who lives in a seaside house built in 1923, said she has experience­d 34 previous tropical cyclones and is not having shutters put on her windows. Her main concern is what will happen to sand on the adjacent beach and the dunes that protect her house and others. She’s staying through the storm.

“The main concern here is, if it doesn’t speed up and decides to stall, there will be enormous erosion,” she said.

Friends Chris Wirtz, 47, and Brendan Peregrine, 44, were staying put at a beachfront inn with their families. Both are from Tampa, about 25 miles (40 kilometres) across the bay and have been through storms many times.

“Before we left, we knew it was coming,” Wirtz said.

Others were taking no chances. Annie Jones, 51, has lived along the Gulf Coast her entire life. She was buying ice and food at a local grocery store in advance of the storm.

“”I’ve seen this happen over the years and I decided to load up,” Jones said.

Across the Tampa Bay region that’s home to about 3.5 million people, events, government offices and schools were closing down early Tuesday in advance of the storm. Tampa Internatio­nal Airport shut down at 5 p.m.

Duke Energy, the main electric utility in the Tampa Bay area, said in a statement it has about 3,000 employees, contractor­s, tree specialist­s and support personnel ready to respond to power outages in the storm’s aftermath. Additional crews are being brought in from other states served by Duke Energy. “We’re trained and prepared, and we want to ensure our customers are safe and prepared for any impacts from the storm,” said Todd Fountain, the utility’s Florida storm director.

The fifth game of the Stanley Cup finals between the Tampa Bay Lightning and Montreal Canadiens, set for tonight, will take place, Tampa Mayor Jane Castor said. The Lightning lead the NHL’S championsh­ip series 3-1 and could clinch the title with a victory.

Bands of rain reached Surfside on Florida’s Atlantic coast, soaking the rubble of the Champlain Towers South, which collapsed June 24, killing at least 36 people. Search and rescue crews have worked through rain in search of more than 100 others unaccounte­d for, although lightning forced rescuers to pause their work for two hours early yesterday, officials said.

Elsa’s maximum sustained winds stood at 70 mph (112 kph) yesterday afternoon. Its core was about 155 miles (250 kilometres) south-southwest of Tampa. It was continuing to move to the north at 10 mph (16 kph), according to the National Hurricane Center.

Desantis expanded a state of emergency to cover 33 counties.

After Florida, forecaster­s predicted Elsa would hit coastal Georgia and South Carolina, portions of which were under a tropical storm watch.

Elsa’s westward shift spared the lower Florida Keys a direct hit, but the islands were still getting plenty of rain and wind Tuesday.

Cuban officials evacuated 180,000 people against the possibilit­y of heavy flooding from a storm that already battered several Caribbean islands, killing at least three people.

 ?? (Photo: Joseph Wellington) ?? A police service vehicle makes it way along a flooded Marcus Garvey Drive in the Corporate Area during heavy rains associated with Tropical Storm Elsa on Sunday.
(Photo: Joseph Wellington) A police service vehicle makes it way along a flooded Marcus Garvey Drive in the Corporate Area during heavy rains associated with Tropical Storm Elsa on Sunday.
 ?? (Photos: AP) ?? Pedestrian­s dash across the intersecti­on of Greene and Duval streets as heavy winds and rain associated with Tropical Storm Elsa pass Key West, Florida, yesterday.
(Photos: AP) Pedestrian­s dash across the intersecti­on of Greene and Duval streets as heavy winds and rain associated with Tropical Storm Elsa pass Key West, Florida, yesterday.
 ??  ?? New homeowner Breanna Landers, 30, of Brandon, thanks park rangers Elizabeth Peterson and Chad Cash while they load sandbags inside the trunk of her vehicle at a Hillsborou­gh County site to help residents prepare for Tropical Storm Elsa, at Edward Medard Conservati­on Park in Plant City, Florida.
New homeowner Breanna Landers, 30, of Brandon, thanks park rangers Elizabeth Peterson and Chad Cash while they load sandbags inside the trunk of her vehicle at a Hillsborou­gh County site to help residents prepare for Tropical Storm Elsa, at Edward Medard Conservati­on Park in Plant City, Florida.

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