The Guardian (USA)

At least four dead as Tropical Storm Nicole’s wind and rain lash Florida

- Richard Luscombe in Miami

The death toll from Tropical Storm Nicole rose to at least four on Thursday after the rare November hurricane battered Florida with strong winds and flooding, then weakened into a rainmaker on course for Georgia and the Carolinas.

The late-season cyclone made landfall close to Vero Beach on Florida’s east coast at about 3am, delivering 75mph winds and a storm surge that collapsed buildings into the ocean and swept away roads as far north as Daytona Beach.

At an afternoon press conference, Jerry Demings, the Orange county mayor, said two people were electrocut­ed in an Orlando neighborho­od when they touched a fallen electricit­y line and two others were killed in a vehicle accident attributed to the storm.

At the storm’s height, 330,000 customers lost power, many in areas recovering from Hurricane Ian, which caused damage across Florida in September.

But Nicole, which gained category 1 hurricane strength on Wednesday afternoon over the Bahamas, hours before its Florida landfall, lacked the intensity of its 150mph predecesso­r, which killed 114.

Nicole was quickly downgraded to a tropical storm inland with maximum sustained winds below 50mph as it headed on a diagonal path past Orlando and Tampa and into the Gulf of Mexico.

The National Hurricane Center (NHC) in Miami said in an afternoon update the storm would continue to lose power through the day, but remain dangerous with heavy rainfall and inland flooding the biggest risks as its remnants turned north-east on a path through Georgia and the Carolinas and towards New York.

“Hazards will continue to affect much of the Florida peninsula and portions of the southeast US,” senior NHC hurricane specialist Jack Beven said in the bulletin.

“Nicole will produce heavy rainfall this evening across the Florida peninsula and flooding will also be possible on Friday in the south-east through the central Appalachia­ns, including the Blue Ridge mountains, and northward through eastern Ohio, west central Pennsylvan­ia, into western New York by Friday night into Saturday.”

Nicole is only the third hurricane to strike the US mainland in November, usually a quiet month as Atlantic storm season winds down. The most recent was Kate in 1985, which hit the Florida panhandle.

Nicole is also the eighth hurricane of an active 2022 season. Stormweary residents along Florida’s east coast were ordered to evacuate from vulnerable barrier islands and waterfront communitie­s, including Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach. Staff at the club, where the former president spent Wednesday analysing midterm election results, hung up when a reporter called to ask if Trump was leaving.

In Daytona Beach, several buildings at the shoreline were swept into the sea and a number of multi-story residentia­l blocks damaged by Hurricane Ian were evacuated. Authoritie­s went door-todoor telling people to grab possession­s and leave. In Lauderdale-by-the-Sea, a large section of the fishing pier collapsed into the ocean.

“Multiple coastal homes in Wilburby-the-Sea have collapsed and several other properties are at imminent risk,” the Volusia county sheriff, Mike Chitwood,

said in a social media message that announced a night-time curfew.

Schools in more than a dozen Florida districts were closed, as were theme parks in Orlando.

The Republican governor, Ron DeSantis, signed an emergency declaratio­n for dozens of counties. Joe Biden also declared an emergency, freeing federal resources and assistance to supplement state, tribal and local response efforts. Federal Emergency Management Agency personnel are already in the state, responding to Hurricane Ian.

“The storm is still very large and the impacts stretch far beyond the center track with much of the state experienci­ng tropical storm force winds,” DeSantis said at a mid-morning briefing from Tallahasse­e on Thursday.

“You have downed trees, you have power lines, you have some road washouts, combined winds and storm surge. We’ve seen beach erosion, especially in areas that have already seen erosion from Hurricane Ian.”

Engineers at the Kennedy space center were assessing damage to Nasa’s $4.1bn Artemis moon rocket, which was left on its launchpad through the storm ahead of its scheduled blast-off on 16 November.

Nicole forced mission managers to push back the launch attempt two days but engineers were confident leaving Artemis at the pad, insisting its Space Launch System rocket and Orion capsule were designed to withstand sustained winds of up to 85mph.

The Orlando Sentinel reported that

sensors on the launchpad tower at Cape

Canaveral recorded at least one gust of 100mph.

“Technician­s will perform walkdowns and inspection­s at the pad to assess the status of the rocket and spacecraft as soon as practicabl­e,” the space agency said in a statement.

 ?? Ricardo Arduengo/Reuters ?? A couple looks at a damaged lifeguard tower following the passage of Hurricane Nicole in Vero Beach, Florida, on Thursday. Photograph:
Ricardo Arduengo/Reuters A couple looks at a damaged lifeguard tower following the passage of Hurricane Nicole in Vero Beach, Florida, on Thursday. Photograph:

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