Cape Argus E-dition

Biden declares Ian ‘a major disaster’

HURRICANE Ian flooded cities, turned out the lights on millions, and left migrants from an overturned boat missing yesterday as Florida assessed damage from one of the most intense US storms in years.

Officials readied a major emergency response to the deluge that laid waste to coastal Florida as the hurricane roared through beachfront towns and horizontal rain pounded communities for hours.

The National Hurricane Center (NHC) downgraded Ian to a tropical storm, but said it was causing “catastrophic flooding” and forecast further “life-threatening” floods, storm surge and high winds in Florida as well as Georgia and South Carolina.

The US Border Patrol said a boat carrying migrants sank at sea, leaving 20 missing. Four Cubans swam to shore in the Florida Keys islands and the coast guard rescued three others.

Ian also menaced the city of Orlando and the nearby Disney theme parks, which were shuttered.

President Joe Biden declared a “major disaster” in Florida, a move that frees up federal funding for storm relief. As dawn broke across the state’s west coast, residents got their first glimpse at the damage.

Ian made landfall as an extremely powerful hurricane just after 3pm on Wednesday on the barrier island of Cayo Costa. Television footage from the coastal city of Naples showed floodwaters surging into beachfront homes, submerging roads and sweeping away vehicles. Pete DiMara, chief of Naples Fire-Rescue, said a surge of up to 2m swept through his station, leaving crews unable to respond to emergencies.

Many cell towers are down and “the surge has certainly caused a lot of destruction in the area,” DiMara said, urging residents to stay home until his crews can reach them.

To the north, areas in Fort Myers, a city of 83 000, resembled lakes.

The NHC said Ian’s maximum sustained winds reached 240km/h when it landed as a Category 4 hurricane – just shy of the maximum Category 5.

As a tropical storm, they had dropped to a maximum 105km/h.

Some 2.6 million of Florida’s 11 million electricity customers were without power yesterday, according to the PowerOutage tracking website.

Florida’s Governor Ron DeSantis said the state should brace for a “nasty, nasty day, two days”. The town of Punta Gorda was in near-total darkness overnight after the storm wiped out power, save for the few buildings with generators. Howling winds toppled trees, pulled chunks out of roofs, and turned debris into dangerous projectiles whipping through town.

Mandatory evacuation orders had been issued for about 2.5 million people in a dozen coastal Florida counties, with several dozen shelters set up. Airports stopped all commercial flights, and cruise ship companies delayed departures or cancelled voyages.

The storm was set to move off the east-central coast of Florida later yesterday and emerge into the Atlantic before blowing through Georgia and the Carolinas to the north. “Ian could be near hurricane strength when it approaches the coast of South Carolina on Friday,” said the NHC.

WORLD

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2022-09-30T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-09-30T07:00:00.0000000Z

http://capeargus.pressreader.com/article/281676848789476

African News Agency