San Diego Union-Tribune

GUAM GETS READY FOR HIT FROM TYPHOON

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Guam’s governor urged residents to stay home and warned the island could take a direct hit from Typhoon Mawar as the storm strengthen­ed on a path toward the U.S. territory in the Pacific.

Gov. Lou Leon Guerrero urged residents in a YouTube message to remain calm and prepare for Mawar, which the National Weather Service said could hit the southern part of Guam around midday local time on Wednesday.

“We may take a direct hit,” said Patrick Doll, lead meteorolog­ist for the National Weather Service in Tiyan, Guam. “If we don’t take a direct hit, it’s going to be very close.”

It was expected to arrive as a 140 mph Category 4 typhoon, weather officials said, possibly delivering the biggest hit in two decades.

The typhoon could cause “extensive damage,” Doll said.

The governor said she would place Guam essentiall­y in a lockdown effective 1 p.m. today.

Rain from the storm’s outer bands started to fall Monday.

A storm surge of 4 to 6 feet above the normal high tide was expected and could reach up to 8 feet. Surf was expected to build sharply in the next day or two along south- and east-facing reefs, with dangerous surf of 15 to 25 feet today into Wednesday, the weather service said.

At the island’s grocery and hardware stores Monday, people were leaving with shopping carts full of canned goods, cases of water and generators, the Pacific Daily News reported.

The Guam Department of Education was preparing to open emergency shelters today, KUAM reported.

Officials warned residents who aren’t in fully concrete structures to consider moving for safety. Many homes are made of wood and tin.

Rota, an island in the U.S. Commonweal­th of the Northern Mariana Islands, was also under a typhoon warning, Doll said. Tinian and Saipan, in the northern Marianas, were under tropical storm warnings.

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