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Puerto Rico braces for flooding, landslides from Karen

Storm approachs as residents shaken by 6.0 quake

By DaNICA COTO, Associated Press
Published: September 24, 2019, 7:54pm
7 Photos
Mayor Rafael Surillo, wearing a blue cap, watches a televised weather report flanked by employees at a makeshift emergency center as they wait for the arrival of Tropical Storm Karen, inside a municipal library in Yabucoa, Puerto Rico, Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2019. Karen regained tropical storm strength as it swirled toward Puerto Rico, where it&#039;s expected to bring heavy rains and strong winds.
Mayor Rafael Surillo, wearing a blue cap, watches a televised weather report flanked by employees at a makeshift emergency center as they wait for the arrival of Tropical Storm Karen, inside a municipal library in Yabucoa, Puerto Rico, Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2019. Karen regained tropical storm strength as it swirled toward Puerto Rico, where it's expected to bring heavy rains and strong winds. (AP Photo/Carlos Giusti) (Carlos Giusti/Associated Press) Photo Gallery

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Tropical Storm Karen drenched the U.S. Virgin Islands on Tuesday as it bore down on an earthquake-shaken Puerto Rico still scarred by a hurricane two years ago.

U.S. Virgin Islands Gov. Albert Bryan Jr. said the storm had already caused mudslides in the territory and major power outages were reported early Tuesday, though he said the cause was not yet clear.

“Don’t take the storm lightly,” Bryan said. “It will start to throw massive rain.”

Schools and government offices were already ordered closed in Puerto Rico as well as in the U.S. and British Virgin Islands, with officials warning people to stay indoors.

As the storm approached, Puerto Ricans were shaken from their beds late Monday by a magnitude 6.0 earthquake that hit in the Atlantic near the island at a shallow depth of 6 miles. Three aftershocks, of magnitude 4.7 and 4.6, followed within less than an hour.

No significant damage was reported, said Carlos Acevedo, director of Puerto Rico’s emergency management agency, adding that the concern now was how much rain Karen would drop on the region. The U.S. National Hurricane Center said it could bring 3 inches to 6 inches with isolated amounts of 10 inches.

Up to 29,000 customers in Puerto Rico were left without power at one point, and heavy rains were already pelting the southeast coastal town of Yabucoa, where 69-year-old retiree Victor Ortiz huddled inside his home with his wife.

“Every year the storms are stronger and more frequent,” he said, adding that he worried about landslides because he lives in a mountainous region.

The National Guard, which was activated by Puerto Rico Gov. Wanda Vazquez on Monday, carried out a last-minute evacuation of a weeks-old baby from the neighboring island of Vieques, which has been without a hospital since Hurricane Maria hit in 2017. Lt. Col. Paul Dahlen said in a phone interview that the baby was sick and would be taken to a hospital before the storm hits.

Karen regained tropical storm strength Tuesday morning after slipping to a tropical depression. Its maximum sustained winds increased in the afternoon to 45 mph, with additional strengthening expected in upcoming days. The storm was centered about 35 miles southeast of San Juan and was moving north at 8 mph. Forecasters said it was expected to hit Puerto Rico’s southeast region by late afternoon.

It was expected to keep heading north after passing over Puerto Rico.

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