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News / Nation & World

Southeast coast prepares for Hurricane Matthew

Storm has killed 9 in Caribbean, is aimed at Eastern seaboard

By TERRY SPENCER and JENNIFER KAY, Associated Press
Published: October 4, 2016, 9:48pm
2 Photos
Kerri Vittimberga of Wilton Manors, Fla., buys a generator, tarps and gas cans Tuesday at Lowe&#039;s in Oakland Park, Fla. Vittimberga, originally from Boston, says this is her &quot;first big storm&quot; in the two years she has lived in Florida.
Kerri Vittimberga of Wilton Manors, Fla., buys a generator, tarps and gas cans Tuesday at Lowe's in Oakland Park, Fla. Vittimberga, originally from Boston, says this is her "first big storm" in the two years she has lived in Florida. (Amy Beth Bennett/South Florida Sun-Sentinel) Photo Gallery

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — South Carolina’s governor said she would issue an evacuation order Wednesday so that 1 million people would have time to leave the coast ahead of Hurricane Matthew, and residents up and down the Eastern seaboard entered better-safe-than-sorry mode, flocking to hardware stores, grocery aisles and gas stations to prepare.

Matthew was on track to rake Florida before spinning up the East Coast. The Category 4 storm packing winds of 145 mph pummeled parts of Haiti and the Dominican Republic on Tuesday and is expected to head north over Cuba and the Bahamas before nearing the Florida coast by Thursday. At least nine people have died in its wake in the Caribbean.

The National Hurricane Center in Miami issued a hurricane watch for the 260 miles from Golden Beach near Fort Lauderdale to the Daytona Beach area, meaning hurricane-force winds, 74 mph or higher, could occur within two days.

In South Florida, lines at grocery stores were heavier than usual and some essentials were in short supply. When Simone Corrado and her husband tried to buy water at their Publix in Davie near Fort Lauderdale, they mostly found empty shelves. There were a few bottles of high-end water brands, but there was so much empty shelf space that Corrado lay down and fully stretched out on the bottom shelf.

“I got scared because all that was left at Publix was just the pricey water,” said Corrado, who lived through 1992’s catastrophic Hurricane Andrew, which practically leveled the nearby city of Homestead. “They really put the fear into you here. On the television screen every few minutes is the ‘beep, beep, beep’ storm alert.”

Gov. Rick Scott, speaking in the Daytona area, warned residents they must be prepared to take a direct hit and that evacuation orders could be issued as early as Tuesday. Scott said his biggest worry is that residents won’t take seriously the threat from Matthew, especially since so many newer residents have never lived through a hurricane.

“Don’t take a chance. Leave before it’s too late,” he said. “We have to be prepared to be hit by a catastrophic hurricane.”

Hurricane Hermine hit the eastern Panhandle on Sept. 2 as a Category 1 storm, the first to strike Florida since Wilma in 2005. It caused one death and damage to beachfront homes, and downed trees and powerlines. Wilma concluded a two-year span when a record eight hurricanes hit the state. The 11-year lull after it was the longest in Florida history.

Governors in Florida, Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina declared states of emergency. President Barack Obama canceled campaign and health care events in Florida on Wednesday and would instead visit the headquarters of the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

Some airlines let passengers change travel plans without penalty if their trip might be affected.

Near Fort Lauderdale, The Home Depot in Davie briefly ran out of propane for gas grills and the supply of batteries was dwindling. People bought plywood to cover windows, tarps to put over outdoor furniture and coolers for food storage.

Dane Vaala, a diesel mechanic, was loading plywood onto his pickup. He needed it so he could stand on his awning to install upper floor shutters at his home. He moved to Florida from Montana in 2007, so Matthew would be his first storm. He had loaded up on canned food and water.

“I’m not too concerned — it doesn’t really bother me much,” he said. “But it is better to prep.”

Haley said state officials would reverse lanes on major evacuation routes in South Carolina. It would be the first major evacuation since Hurricane Floyd in 1999; the governor at the time didn’t reverse the lanes and Interstate 26 became a parking lot. A typically two-hour drive from Charleston to Columbia turned into 24-hour nightmare.

“We’ve been though winter storms. We’ve been through a 1,000-year flood. A hurricane is different. I don’t want anyone to look at the last couple of tragedies we’ve gone through and think this is similar,” she said.

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