Orlando Sentinel

Maria smashes Dominica, aims at Puerto Rico

Residents in wooden, flimsy homes warned to evacuate

- By Carlisle Jno Baptiste and Danica Coto

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Hurricane Maria barreled toward Puerto Rico last night after wreaking widespread devastatio­n on Dominica and leaving the small Caribbean island virtually incommunic­ado.

As rains began to lash Puerto Rico, Gov. Ricardo Rossello warned that Maria could hit “with a force and violence that we haven’t seen for several generation­s.”

“We’re going to lose a lot of infrastruc­ture in Puerto Rico,” Rossello said, adding that a likely islandwide power outage and communicat­ion blackout could last for days. “We’re going to have to rebuild.”

Authoritie­s warned that people in wooden or flimsy homes should find safe shelter before the

storm’s expected arrival today.

“You have to evacuate. Otherwise, you’re going to die,” said Hector Pesquera, the island’s public safety commission­er. “I don’t know how to make this any clearer.”

By Tuesday evening, the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said Maria’s winds had intensifie­d to 175 mph and additional strengthen­ing was possible. At 10 p.m., Maria was centered about 40 miles south-southeast of St. Croix, or 135 miles southeast of San Juan, Puerto Rico, and was moving west-northwest at 10 mph.

Maria’s center was expected to pass several miles south of St. Croix late Tuesday on its way to Puerto Rico, prompting U.S. Virgin Islands Gov. Kenneth Mapp to ask that people remain alert.

St. Croix was largely spared the widespread damage caused by Hurricane Irma on the chain’s St. Thomas and St. John islands just two weeks ago. But this time, the island would experience five hours of hurricane force winds starting about 11 p.m., Mapp said.

“For folks in their homes, I really recommend that you not be in any kind of sleepwear,” he said during a brief press conference late Tuesday. “Make sure you have your shoes on. Make sure you have a jacket around. Something for your head in case your roof should breach. I don’t really recommend you be sleeping from 11 o’clock to 4 [a.m.]. Be aware of what’s going on around you.”

The warning came after Dominica Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit sent out a series of dramatic posts on his Facebook page as the storm blew over that tiny country late Monday — but then stopped suddenly as phone and internet connection­s with the country were cut.

“The winds are merciless! We shall survive by the grace of God,” Skerrit wrote before communicat­ions went down.

A few minutes later, he messaged he could hear the sound of galvanized steel roofing tearing off houses on the small rugged island. He said that even his own roof had blown away.

In the last message before falling silent, he appealed for internatio­nal aid: “We will need help, my friends, we will need help of all kinds.”

The storm knocked out communicat­ions for the entire country, leaving anyone outside Dominica struggling to determine the extent of damage, though it was clearly widespread. “The situation is really grave,” Consul General Barbara Dailey said in a telephone interview from New York.

She said she lost contact with the island about 4 a.m. At that point, officials had learned that 70 percent of homes had lost their roofs, including her own.

“I lost everything,” she said, adding there had been no word on casualties. “As a Category 5 it would be naive not to expect any [injuries], but I don’t know how many,” she said.

The island’s broadcast service was also down Tuesday, and Akamai Technologi­es, a company that tracks the status of the internet around the world, said most of Dominica's internet service appeared to have been lost by midday.

The Ross University School of Medicine in Dominica reported a widespread loss of communicat­ion on the island, and relatives of students posted messages on its Facebook page saying they had been unable to talk to their loved ones since late Monday evening as the storm approached.

Dominica is particular­ly vulnerable to flooding because of its steep mountains, cut through with rivers that rage even after a heavy rain. It was still recovering from Tropical Storm Erika, which killed 30 people and destroyed more than 370 homes in August 2015.

Officials on the neighborin­g French island of Guadeloupe reported at least one death: a person hit by a falling tree. They said two other people were reported missing after their boat sank off La Desirade island, just east of Guadeloupe.

About 40 percent of the island — 80,000 homes — were without power, and flooding was reported in several communitie­s.

In the Puerto Rican capital, San Juan, normally crowded streets and beaches were empty by Tuesday afternoon, as families heading to safe shelter packed up their cars and pets or secured windows and doors around their home to prepare for severe winds expected to lash the island for 12 to 24 hours.

Nearly 2,800 people were in shelters across Puerto Rico, along with 105 pets, officials said.

“We’re definitely afraid,” said Erica Huber, a 33-year-old teacher from Venice, Florida, who moved to Puerto Rico a month ago with her 12-year-old daughter.

“I’m more worried about the aftermath: Is there going to be enough food and water?” she said.

In shops across the island, shelves were bare after people filled shopping carts with the limited amount of water, batteries, baby formula, milk and other items they could find.

Iris Tosado, a 64-year-old widowed housewife, scanned the nearly empty shelves before heading back home.

She and her disabled son planned to spend the storm with relatives because their home is made of wood, and she prayed that it would not be destroyed.

“God, it’s the only thing I have,” she said. “This is not looking good.”

 ?? RICARDO ARDUENGO/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? People board up windows of a business to prepare for Hurricane Maria in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
RICARDO ARDUENGO/AFP/GETTY IMAGES People board up windows of a business to prepare for Hurricane Maria in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
 ?? CARL JUSTE/MIAMI HERALD/TNS ?? Handymen Daniel Hernandez, right, and Mario Baniaga work quickly Tuesday to board up the windows for a client’s storefront to prepare for Hurricane Maria’s arrival in Puerto Rico’s historic Old San Juan.
CARL JUSTE/MIAMI HERALD/TNS Handymen Daniel Hernandez, right, and Mario Baniaga work quickly Tuesday to board up the windows for a client’s storefront to prepare for Hurricane Maria’s arrival in Puerto Rico’s historic Old San Juan.

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