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Irma’s Fearsome Winds Reach Florida Shores, With Full Strike Yet to Come - The New York Times

posted onSeptember 10, 2017
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Article snippet: MIAMI — After plowing a path of destruction through the Caribbean and forcing hundreds of thousands to flee in one of the largest evacuations in American history, Hurricane Irma began to maul southern Florida on Saturday and was poised to howl up its west coast Sunday with deadly force and fury. The time to gather supplies was over, and in most of the region, it was getting too late to run. The Florida Keys faced a potentially catastrophic brew of winds reaching 130 miles an hour and a storm surge that threatened to drown whole islands. By Saturday evening, the ocean around Key West was spilling into hotel parking lots and onto roads, while tornadoes rumbled like freight trains through Palm Beach and Broward Counties. On the Gulf Coast, a late westward turn in the forecast had put Naples, Fort Myers and the heavily populated peninsulas of Tampa Bay directly in Irma’s track. Officials who had earlier expected a lighter blow from the storm spent the day frantically turning schools and other fortified buildings into shelters as fast as evacuees could wedge into them. Shelters opened. They filled. More opened. More filled. Long lines outside were bulging with suitcases, light furniture, pet carriers and jitters. By Saturday more than six million Floridians had been ordered to leave or get to shelters, though as in any storm, not everyone was heeding the warning. “If you have been ordered to evacuate, you need to leave now,” Gov. Rick Scott said at a news conference. ... Link to the full article to read more

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