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09-03-2004, 06:09 AM
Florida clears way as Frances looms
Roads jammed in state's largest evacuation ever
By BRENDAN FARRINGTON
Associated Press
RESOURCES
http://images.chron.com/content/news/photos/03/07/15/evacsign.jpg
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• Hundreds of thousands evacuate in Florida (http://stream.ap.org/ramgen/apvideo/0901frances_preps_SS.rm) / 9/2
• Photo gallery (http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/topstory/2775586#)
• Tropical weather: (http://weather.chron.com/tropical/) Track storms and get full forecasts
• Interactive: (http://customwire.ap.org/dynamic/files/specials/interactives/hurricane/index.html?SITE=TXHOU&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT) Hurricanes explained
• Hurricane guide: (http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/topstory/2775586#) Safety tips, supply list and more
• National Hurricane Center (http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/)
Eds: PMs. MELBOURNE, Fla. -- Fleeing what could be the most powerful storm to strike Florida in more than a decade, residents and tourists jammed highways and shelters today as Hurricane Frances churned toward the Atlantic coast, where the state's second pummeling in three weeks could begin as soon as Saturday.
About 2.5 million residents were ordered Thursday to head for safety -- the largest evacuation in state history. Harried residents rushed to fortify their homes with plywood and storm shutters and waited in line, sometimes impatiently, for water, canned food and gas.
"I'm petrified," said Deena Dacey, who fled her Rockledge home near Cape Canaveral for a hotel room near Tampa's Busch Gardens on the other, leeward side of the state. "If we can get settled, we might be OK, but I doubt it."
Frances weakened Friday into a strong Category 3 storm packing 120 mph winds and the potential to push ashore waves up to 14 feet high, and was expected to begin affecting the state by Friday evening. Its top sustained winds were down from about 145 mph on Thursday, but forecasters said it could be fluctuation typical with large storms.
At 4 a.m. CDT, the hurricane was centered 285 miles east-southeast of the lower Florida east coast and was moving west-northwest near 9 mph. Hurricane-force winds extended up to 85 miles from its center.
Frances' landfall would represent the first time since 1950 that two major storms have hit Florida so close together. It comes on the heels of Hurricane Charley, which hit on Aug. 13 and inflicted billions of dollars in damage to homes, knocking out power to hundreds of thousands and causing 27 deaths as it crossed from the Gulf of Mexico into the Atlantic.
With its imposing size -- a cloud cover about as big as the state of Texas -- Frances had the potential to ravage the state with its slow movement. Forecasters said the slower the storm moves across the ocean, the longer its winds and rain could linger, increasing the possibility of serious damage.
"The good news is for the procrastinators out there, that buys you a little more time, so take advantage of it," said Jaime Rhome, a meteorologist at the National Hurricane Center in Miami.
But, he warned, a slow moving storm like this could bring 10 to 20 inches of rain.
The hurricane warning covered most of the state's eastern coast, from Florida City, near the state's southern tip, to Flagler Beach, north of Daytona Beach. Forecasters could not say with certainty where Frances would come ashore, just that the core would strike late Saturday.
About 14.6 million of Florida's 17 million people live in the areas under hurricane watches and warnings.
"I am a prayerful person and I will pray. I know a lot of other people are praying right now that this storm moves in a different direction," said Gov. Jeb Bush.
Bush estimated 2.5 million residents were under evacuation orders in 15 Florida counties based on the state's projections of people living in evacuated areas. Individual counties reported at least 1.32 million residents ordered evacuated.
The governor asked his brother, President Bush, to declare Florida a federal disaster area and make storm victims eligible for recovery aid. Federal officials promised they had enough people and supplies in the state to handle two disaster-relief operations at once.
Bumper-to-bumper traffic clogged state highways, leaving a stream of lights into the evening. Traffic backed up for miles on sections of Interstate 95, the main north-south highway along the state's east coast, and was heavy along Interstate 4, which connects Daytona Beach, Orlando and Tampa in central Florida.
"I've got half my house in my car," said Doris Johnson, a retiree who waited outside a shelter with her husband, hauling a pile of blankets, pillows, and water. "I just want it over with, and hope and pray no one gets hurt."
The storm and the evacuations it forced were spoiling Labor Day trips and disrupting holiday travel across the Southeast.
In Melbourne, the 300-room beachfront Holiday Inn Beach Resort had been fully booked until guest started checking out Thursday under an evacuation order. General manager Tim Michaud estimated at least $100,000 in lost revenue.
"That's just rooms," Michaud said. "We're also losing functions for the weekend."
Airports were packed with people hoping to depart before all flights were grounded. Hotels and motels inland filled up, and gas stations ran dry.
Florida rescinded tolls on major roads and said lanes on some highways could be reversed to handle the evacuation traffic. State officials hoped to avoid a repeat of the mess during Hurricane Floyd in 1999, when 1.3 million people were told to evacuate the state's east coast and traffic backed up 30 miles or more.
The Kennedy Space Center at Cape Canaveral was ordered completely evacuated for the first time because of the dual threats of high wind and storm surge.
Many businesses along the Atlantic coast began closing Wednesday. Residents flocked to the stores that remained open, hoping to pick up bottled water and canned goods while long lines formed outside home supply stores for scarce plywood or generators.
"Ain't no bread. Ain't no water," grumbled Anita Walker, 53, staring at empty shelves at a Tampa Wal-Mart. "When they say hurricane, they buy everything."
Frances was about twice the size of 1992's Hurricane Andrew, the Category 5 storm that destroyed much of southern Miami-Dade County. The last time two major storms hit Florida so close together was 54 years ago, when Hurricane Easy hit the Tampa area and Hurricane King struck Miami about six weeks later. Neither storm was as powerful as Charley or Frances -- a scary thought for many Floridians.
"We've took enough clothes for three days," said Revonda Barrs, 44, of Vero Beach, who stopped at a Port St. Lucie gas station. "We boarded our dog and we basically left all our other possessions in the hands of God." Meanwhile, the ninth named storm of the season formed early Friday in the far eastern Atlantic. Tropical Storm Ivan was located about 610 miles southwest of the Cape Verde Islands and had maximum sustained winds of 40 mph.
Roads jammed in state's largest evacuation ever
By BRENDAN FARRINGTON
Associated Press
RESOURCES
http://images.chron.com/content/news/photos/03/07/15/evacsign.jpg
function MM_openBrWindow(theURL,winName,features) { //v1.2window.open(theURL,winName,features);}http://images.chron.com/content/common/icons/camerablk.jpg Video:
• Hundreds of thousands evacuate in Florida (http://stream.ap.org/ramgen/apvideo/0901frances_preps_SS.rm) / 9/2
• Photo gallery (http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/topstory/2775586#)
• Tropical weather: (http://weather.chron.com/tropical/) Track storms and get full forecasts
• Interactive: (http://customwire.ap.org/dynamic/files/specials/interactives/hurricane/index.html?SITE=TXHOU&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT) Hurricanes explained
• Hurricane guide: (http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/topstory/2775586#) Safety tips, supply list and more
• National Hurricane Center (http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/)
Eds: PMs. MELBOURNE, Fla. -- Fleeing what could be the most powerful storm to strike Florida in more than a decade, residents and tourists jammed highways and shelters today as Hurricane Frances churned toward the Atlantic coast, where the state's second pummeling in three weeks could begin as soon as Saturday.
About 2.5 million residents were ordered Thursday to head for safety -- the largest evacuation in state history. Harried residents rushed to fortify their homes with plywood and storm shutters and waited in line, sometimes impatiently, for water, canned food and gas.
"I'm petrified," said Deena Dacey, who fled her Rockledge home near Cape Canaveral for a hotel room near Tampa's Busch Gardens on the other, leeward side of the state. "If we can get settled, we might be OK, but I doubt it."
Frances weakened Friday into a strong Category 3 storm packing 120 mph winds and the potential to push ashore waves up to 14 feet high, and was expected to begin affecting the state by Friday evening. Its top sustained winds were down from about 145 mph on Thursday, but forecasters said it could be fluctuation typical with large storms.
At 4 a.m. CDT, the hurricane was centered 285 miles east-southeast of the lower Florida east coast and was moving west-northwest near 9 mph. Hurricane-force winds extended up to 85 miles from its center.
Frances' landfall would represent the first time since 1950 that two major storms have hit Florida so close together. It comes on the heels of Hurricane Charley, which hit on Aug. 13 and inflicted billions of dollars in damage to homes, knocking out power to hundreds of thousands and causing 27 deaths as it crossed from the Gulf of Mexico into the Atlantic.
With its imposing size -- a cloud cover about as big as the state of Texas -- Frances had the potential to ravage the state with its slow movement. Forecasters said the slower the storm moves across the ocean, the longer its winds and rain could linger, increasing the possibility of serious damage.
"The good news is for the procrastinators out there, that buys you a little more time, so take advantage of it," said Jaime Rhome, a meteorologist at the National Hurricane Center in Miami.
But, he warned, a slow moving storm like this could bring 10 to 20 inches of rain.
The hurricane warning covered most of the state's eastern coast, from Florida City, near the state's southern tip, to Flagler Beach, north of Daytona Beach. Forecasters could not say with certainty where Frances would come ashore, just that the core would strike late Saturday.
About 14.6 million of Florida's 17 million people live in the areas under hurricane watches and warnings.
"I am a prayerful person and I will pray. I know a lot of other people are praying right now that this storm moves in a different direction," said Gov. Jeb Bush.
Bush estimated 2.5 million residents were under evacuation orders in 15 Florida counties based on the state's projections of people living in evacuated areas. Individual counties reported at least 1.32 million residents ordered evacuated.
The governor asked his brother, President Bush, to declare Florida a federal disaster area and make storm victims eligible for recovery aid. Federal officials promised they had enough people and supplies in the state to handle two disaster-relief operations at once.
Bumper-to-bumper traffic clogged state highways, leaving a stream of lights into the evening. Traffic backed up for miles on sections of Interstate 95, the main north-south highway along the state's east coast, and was heavy along Interstate 4, which connects Daytona Beach, Orlando and Tampa in central Florida.
"I've got half my house in my car," said Doris Johnson, a retiree who waited outside a shelter with her husband, hauling a pile of blankets, pillows, and water. "I just want it over with, and hope and pray no one gets hurt."
The storm and the evacuations it forced were spoiling Labor Day trips and disrupting holiday travel across the Southeast.
In Melbourne, the 300-room beachfront Holiday Inn Beach Resort had been fully booked until guest started checking out Thursday under an evacuation order. General manager Tim Michaud estimated at least $100,000 in lost revenue.
"That's just rooms," Michaud said. "We're also losing functions for the weekend."
Airports were packed with people hoping to depart before all flights were grounded. Hotels and motels inland filled up, and gas stations ran dry.
Florida rescinded tolls on major roads and said lanes on some highways could be reversed to handle the evacuation traffic. State officials hoped to avoid a repeat of the mess during Hurricane Floyd in 1999, when 1.3 million people were told to evacuate the state's east coast and traffic backed up 30 miles or more.
The Kennedy Space Center at Cape Canaveral was ordered completely evacuated for the first time because of the dual threats of high wind and storm surge.
Many businesses along the Atlantic coast began closing Wednesday. Residents flocked to the stores that remained open, hoping to pick up bottled water and canned goods while long lines formed outside home supply stores for scarce plywood or generators.
"Ain't no bread. Ain't no water," grumbled Anita Walker, 53, staring at empty shelves at a Tampa Wal-Mart. "When they say hurricane, they buy everything."
Frances was about twice the size of 1992's Hurricane Andrew, the Category 5 storm that destroyed much of southern Miami-Dade County. The last time two major storms hit Florida so close together was 54 years ago, when Hurricane Easy hit the Tampa area and Hurricane King struck Miami about six weeks later. Neither storm was as powerful as Charley or Frances -- a scary thought for many Floridians.
"We've took enough clothes for three days," said Revonda Barrs, 44, of Vero Beach, who stopped at a Port St. Lucie gas station. "We boarded our dog and we basically left all our other possessions in the hands of God." Meanwhile, the ninth named storm of the season formed early Friday in the far eastern Atlantic. Tropical Storm Ivan was located about 610 miles southwest of the Cape Verde Islands and had maximum sustained winds of 40 mph.