Arab Times

Resurgent Sally pounds Florida

150,000 homes, without power

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PENSACOLA, Fla, Sept 16, (AP): A newly strengthen­ed Hurricane Sally pummeled the Florida Panhandle and south Alabama with sideways rain, beach-covering storm surges, strong winds and power outages early Wednesday, moving toward shore at an agonizingl­y slow pace that promised a drawn out drenching and possible record floods.

Some 150,000 homes and businesses had lost electricit­y by early Wednesday, according to the power outage.us site. A curfew was called in the coastal Alabama city of Gulf Shores due to life-threatenin­g conditions. In the Panhandle’s Escambia County, Chief Sheriff’s Deputy Chip Simmons vowed to keep deputies out with residents as long as physically possible. The county includes Pensacola, one of the largest cities on the Gulf Coast.

“The sheriff’s office will be there until we can no longer safely be out there, and then and only then will we pull our deputies in,” Simmons said at a storm briefing late Tuesday.

This for a storm that, during the weekend, appeared to be headed for New Orleans. “Obviously this shows what we’ve known for a long time with storms – they are unpredicta­ble,” Pensacola Mayor Grover Robinson IV said.

Sally rapidly strengthen­ed as it approached land, quickly rising into a Category 2 storm, packing 105 mph (168 kph) winds. It was 60 miles (96 kilometers) south-southeast of Mobile, Alabama, and moving northnorth­east at 2 mph (4 kph). Landfall was expected on the northern Gulf Coast early Wednesday. A National Hurricane Center forecast map showed a possible landfall between Alabama’s Mobile Bay and the Panhandle.

Sally was a rare storm that could make history, said Ed Rappaport, deputy director of the National Hurricane Center.

“Sally has a characteri­stic that isn’t often seen and that’s a slow forward speed and that’s going to exacerbate the flooding,” Rappaport told The Associated Press.

He likened the storm’s slow progressio­n to that of Hurricane Harvey, which swamped Houston in 2017. Up to 30 inches (76 centimeter­s) of rain could fall in some spots, and “that would be record-setting in some locations,” Rappaport said in an interview Tuesday night.

Although the hurricane had the Alabama and Florida coasts in its sights Wednesday, its effects were felt all along the northern Gulf Coast. Low lying properties in southeast Louisiana were swamped by the surge. Water covered Mississipp­i beaches and parts of the highway that runs parallel to them. Two large casino boats broke loose from a dock where they were undergoing constructi­on work in Alabama.

Mississipp­i Gov. Tate Reeves urged people in the southern part of his state to prepare for the potential for flash flooding.

As Sally’s outer bands reached the Gulf Coast, the manager of an alligator ranch in Moss Point, Mississipp­i, was hoping he wouldn’t have to live a repeat of what happened at the gator farm in 2005. That’s when about 250 alligators escaped their enclosures during Hurricane Katrina’s storm surge.

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