The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Dorian gains fury but could spare Florida a direct hit

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MIAMI — Hurricane Dorian powered toward Florida with increasing fury Friday — but also indication­s that it might just skirt the U.S. coastline and spare it from the devastatin­g direct hit that forecaster­s have been fearing for days.

Forecaster­s warned that no one is out of danger and Dorian could still wallop the state with “extremely dangerous” 140 mph winds and torrential rains late Monday or early Tuesday, with millions of people in the crosshairs along with Walt Disney World and President Donald Trump’s MaraLago resort.

But some of the more reliable computer models predicted a turn northward that would have Dorian hug the coast, delivering a glancing blow, the National Hurricane Center said.

“We could still be talking about a notable loss but nothing remotely close to if we had a direct hit,” said meteorolog­ist Steve Bowen, global head of catastroph­e insights for the reinsuranc­e firm Aon.

Weather Undergroun­d meteorolog­y director Jeff Masters said: “There is hope.”

The faint, encouragin­g signs came at the end of a day in which Dorian seemed to get scarier with each forecast update. It strengthen­ed into a Category 3 hurricane in the afternoon, and there were fears it could prove to be the most powerful hurricane to hit Florida’s east coast in nearly 30 years.

Late Friday, the National Hurricane Center’s projected new track showed Dorian hitting near Fort Pierce, some 70 miles north of MaraLago, then running along the coastline as it moved north. But forecaster­s cautioned that the storm’s track was still highly uncertain and even a small deviation could put Dorian offshore or well inland.

Trump declared a state of emergency in Florida and authorized the Federal Emergency Management Agency to coordinate disasterre­lief efforts.

“This is big and is growing and it still has some time to get worse,” Julio Vasquez said at a Miami fastfood joint next to a gas station that had run out of fuel. “No one knows what can really happen. This is serious.”

As Dorian closed in, it played havoc with people’s Labor Day weekend plans. Major airlines began allowing travelers to change their reservatio­ns without a fee. The big cruise lines began rerouting their ships. Disney World and the other resorts in Orlando found themselves in the storm’s projected path.

 ?? Amy Beth Bennett / Associated Press ?? Joan Chang, center, gets help filling her bags during a sandbag giveaway in preparatio­n for Hurricane Dorian on Friday in Margate, Fla.
Amy Beth Bennett / Associated Press Joan Chang, center, gets help filling her bags during a sandbag giveaway in preparatio­n for Hurricane Dorian on Friday in Margate, Fla.

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