Gulf coast states are preparing
to be hit by Tropical Storm Isaac after the U.S. National Hurricane Center
issued hurricane warnings for an area stretching from Louisiana to the Florida
Panhandle on Sunday.
Isaac is expected to hit somewhere between
southeastern Louisiana and the Florida Panhandle either late Tuesday or early
Wednesday, the National Hurricane Center said. The warnings stretched from east
of Morgan City, La. -- which includes the New Orleans area -- to Destin, Fla.
As Isaac passed over the Florida keys, preparations
began farther north as forecasters warned that the storm could be a strong
Category 2 hurricane by the time it reaches the Gulf Coast..
Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal declared a state of
emergency for Louisiana on Sunday afternoon, while New Orleans Mayor Mitch
Landrieu took the same action for his city.
"Now is not the time to panic; it's a time to
prepare," Landrieu said in a statement.
Jindal, a GOP governor expected to speak at this
week’s Republican National Convention in Tampa, said he was staying put in
Louisiana to ride out the storm.
Mississippi and Alabama also called state of
emergencies, with Alabama Gov. Robert Bentley ordering residents in Mobile and
Baldwin counties to evacuate Monday morning beginning at 8 a.m.
National Hurricane Center Director Rick Knabb told
Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant on a conference call that forecasters expect Isaac
to drive a storm tide of 6-12 feet into coastal estuaries.
Isaac could come ashore Wednesday morning, seven
years to the day after Hurricane Katrina killed more than 200 Mississippians
and caused billions of dollars in damage.
The Gulf Coast hasn't been hit by a hurricane since
2008, when Dolly, Ike and Gustav all struck the region.
As of 8 p.m. EDT, the storm was centered about 530
miles southeast of the mouth of the Mississippi River, according to the
National Hurricane Center in Miami. Isaac had top sustained winds of 65 mph and
was moving to the northwest at 15 mph.
Tropical storm-force winds extended outward up to
205 miles from the center, meaning storm conditions are possible even in places
not in Isaac's direct path.
Even before reaching hurricane strength, Isaac has
caused considerable inconvenience, with hundreds of flights canceled at
airports in Miami and Fort Lauderdale. There were scattered power outages from
Key West to Fort Lauderdale affecting more than 6,000 customers, and flooding
occurred in low-lying areas.
Gov. Rick Scott said at a news conference Sunday
evening that only minor damage was reported from Isaac, but wind gusts of 60
mph were reported as far north as Pompano Beach, north of Fort Lauderdale.
While officials urged residents in southeast Florida to stay home, that
recommendation was ignored by some surfers and joggers on Miami Beach and
shoppers at area malls.
The storm was predicted to pass west of Tampa, the
site of the Republican National Convention, but it had already disrupted the
schedule there because of the likelihood of heavy rain and strong winds.
In Key West, Emalyn Mercer rode her bike while
decked out with a snorkel and mask, inflatable arm bands and a paddle, just for
a laugh. She rode with Kelly Friend, who wore a wet suit, dive cap and lobster
gloves.
"We're just going for a drink," Mercer
said.
"With the ones that are brave enough like
us," Friend added.
Along famed Duval Street, many stores, bars and
restaurants closed, the cigar rollers and palm readers packed up, and just a
handful of drinking holes remained open.
That kind of ho-hum attitude extended farther up
the coast. Edwin Reeder swung by a gas station in Miami Shores — not for fuel,
but drinks and snacks.
"This isn't a storm," he said. "It's
a rain storm."
With a laugh, Reeder said he has not stocked up
aside from buying dog and cat food.
The forecast wasn't funny, however. Isaac was
expected to draw significant strength from the warm, open waters of the Gulf of
Mexico..
At Miami International Airport, more than 450
flights Sunday were canceled. Inside the American Airlines terminal, people
craned for a look out of one of the doors as a particularly strong band of
Isaac began lashing the airport with strong rain and high wind.
Michele Remillard said she was trying to get a seat
on a flight to New Orleans, well aware the city could be affected by Isaac
later this week. In coastal Plaquemines Parish, La., crews rushed to protect
the levees that keep floodwaters from reaching that New Orleans suburb.
Hurricane center forecasters are uncertain of the
storm's path because two of their best computer models now track the storm on
opposite sides of a broad cone. One model has Isaac going well west and the
other well east. For the moment, the predicted track goes up the middle.
Haitians began to dig themselves out of the mud on
Sunday, one day after Tropical Storm Isaac doused the Caribbean nation and
killed eight people there and another two in neighboring Dominican Republic.
With a reported total of 10 deaths for the island
of Hispaniola, which is shared by the two countries, the scale of devastation
was less than many people had feared.
But the capital and countryside of disaster-prone
Haiti did suffer sporadic flooding, fallen poles and scores of toppled tents
that housed people who lost their homes in the massive 2010 earthquake.
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