Watch as the U.S. Coast Guard airlifted a couple and their cats trapped by floodwaters in Sanibel, Florida, in the wake of Hurricane Ian
A resurgent Ian swept ashore at 2:05 p.m. near Georgetown, a waterfront town about 60 miles north of the historic city of Charleston, packing maximum sustained wind speeds of 85 mph as a Category 1 hurricane, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said.
There have been reports of at least 21 deaths in Florida, Kevin Guthrie, director of the state's Division of Emergency Management, said at a morning briefing. He stressed that some of those reports remained unconfirmed. A city-commissioned report released in November 2020 found that about 90% of all residential properties were vulnerable to storm surge flooding.
Some 10,000 people were unaccounted for, Guthrie said, but many of them were likely in shelters or without power. Roughly 1.6 million Florida homes and businesses remained without power on Friday, according to PowerOutage.us. Hundreds of beleaguered Fort Myers residents lined up at a Home Depot on Friday on the east side of the city, hoping to purchase gas cans, generators, bottled water and other supplies. The line stretched as long as a football field.
She watched as the storm tore the porch off her home in Cape Coral. Despite it all, she is not thinking of leaving Florida.
日本 最新ニュース, 日本 見出し
Similar News:他のニュース ソースから収集した、これに似たニュース記事を読むこともできます。
Hurricane Ian live updates: Ian makes landfall in South Carolina two days after first hitting FloridaIan made its second landfall near Georgetown, S.C. as a Category 1 hurricane on Friday afternoon.
続きを読む »
Hurricane Ian: Manatees at Spring Park fighting Hurricane Ian storm surge* LOCATIONS AFFECTED\n- Bonaire\n- Centerville\n- Clinchfield\n- Elberta\n- Elko\n- Grovania\n- Grove Park\n\n* WIND\n- LATEST LOCAL FORECAST: Below tropical storm force wind\n- Peak Wind Forecast: 15-25 mph with gusts to 45 mph\n\n- THREAT TO LIFE AND PROPERTY THAT INCLUDES TYPICAL FORECAST\nUNCERTAINTY IN TRACK, SIZE AND INTENSITY: Potential for wind 39\nto 57 mph\n- The wind threat has remained nearly steady from the\nprevious assessment.\n- PLAN: Plan for hazardous wind of equivalent tropical storm\nforce.\n- PREPARE: Remaining efforts to protect property should be\ncompleted as soon as possible. Prepare for limited wind\ndamage.\n- ACT: Move to safe shelter before the wind becomes hazardous.\n\n- POTENTIAL IMPACTS: Limited\n- Damage to porches, awnings, carports, sheds, and unanchored\nmobile homes. Unsecured lightweight objects blown about.\n- Many large tree limbs broken off. A few trees snapped or\nuprooted, but with greater numbers in places where trees\nare shallow rooted. Some fences and roadway signs blown\nover.\n- A few roads impassable from debris, particularly within\nurban or heavily wooded places. Hazardous driving\nconditions on bridges and other elevated roadways.\n- Scattered power and communications outages.\n\n* STORM SURGE\n- LATEST LOCAL FORECAST: Life-threatening storm surge possible\n- Peak Storm Surge Inundation: The potential for 4-6 feet\nabove ground somewhere within surge prone areas\n- Window of concern: through Friday evening\n\n- THREAT TO LIFE AND PROPERTY THAT INCLUDES TYPICAL FORECAST\nUNCERTAINTY IN TRACK, SIZE AND INTENSITY: Potential for storm\nsurge flooding greater than 3 feet above ground\n- The storm surge threat has remained nearly steady from the\nprevious assessment.\n- PLAN: Shelter against life-threatening storm surge of\ngreater than 3 feet above ground.\n- PREPARE: Flood preparations and ordered evacuations should\nbe complete. Evacuees should be in shelters well away from\nstorm surge flooding.\n- ACT: Remain shel
続きを読む »
After Devastating Florida, Hurricane Ian Takes Aim at South Carolina, GeorgiaHurricane Ian has left millions of Florida residents without power and caused massive flooding across large portions of the state, but the storm will soon put several other Atlantic coast states in its crosshairs this weekend.
続きを読む »
Hurricane Ian heads to South Carolina as floods trap many in Florida; death toll rises | LIVEThis eye-popping video shows a large, dark fish with sharp dorsal fins thrashing around an inundated Fort Myers backyard as Hurricane Ian's storm surge moves in. AP confirmed through original clip’s metadata that the video was captured Wednesday morning.
続きを読む »
Hurricane Ian hours away South Carolina landfallHurricane Ian will make landfall in South Carolina on Friday after producing catastrophic damage across Florida earlier in the week. Ian is impacting Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina with life-threatening flooding, storm surge and high winds.
続きを読む »