Hurricane Dennis targets storm-scarred US coast
Posted on: Sunday, 10 July 2005, 09:39 CDT
By Michael Christie
MIAMI (Reuters) - Hurricane Dennis thundered toward the U.S. Gulf Coast on Sunday with ferocious winds and waves that threatened potentially massive destruction in an area still bearing the scars of the last storm season.
After killing 32 people in Cuba and Haiti in the Caribbean, Dennis roared northward in the Gulf of Mexico with 145 mph (230 kph) winds capable of stripping roofs of buildings, and a 10- to 15-foot (3 meter to 4.6 meter) storm surge that could swamp coastal towns.
At 9 a.m EDT (1300 GMT), Dennis was a Category 4 hurricane on the five-step Saffir-Simpson scale -- stronger than Hurricane Ivan was when it came ashore last September and killed 25 people, caused $14 billion in damages and destroyed or damaged 13 oil drilling platforms in the Gulf.
Authorities in Florida, Alabama and Mississippi urged more than 1.2 million people in vulnerable low-lying areas to leave their homes and many heeded the warning, streaming away in long lines of cars all day Saturday and draining gas stations dry.
"We've deployed a lot of resources. We've prepositioned medical, water, food, other kinds of supplies," Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff told ABC's "This Week" on Sunday.
"But people have to be braced for a very serious storm."
In Pensacola, emergency officials told residents who decided to ride the storm out at home to write their names in waterproof ink across their chests in case they were killed and needed to be identified, WFOR television reported.
Flat as glass a day before, Pensacola bay on Sunday morning turned into a heaving 4- to 6-foot (1.2 meter to 1.8 meter) sea, washing over the bridges connecting the outlying barrier island and the Pensacola U.S. Naval Air Station to the mainland. Dennis at 9 a.m. was located 125 miles to the south-southeast of Pensacola, the hurricane center said.
Sheets of rain raced across the choppy water at Pensacola, where blue tarps still cover houses whose roofs were damaged by Ivan, and forecasters warned that Dennis could bring rainfall of 15 inches (38 cm) in the area where it makes landfall.
GULF COAST ENERGY
Energy companies pulled hundreds of workers off oil rigs and shut down some crude and natural gas production in the Gulf of Mexico, where the United States gets a quarter of its oil and gas.
Along the Gulf Coast, some people shuttered their houses with recycled boards bearing the words "Go Away Ivan."
Ivan was one of an unprecedented four hurricanes to hit Florida in a six-week period last season. Florida officials said 40,000 homes statewide had not been fixed yet.
"We're scared," said Lee Schoen, 48, a youth services worker who was boarding up her waterfront home on Mobile Bay in Alabama. "We're moving our valuables and things you can't replace and going to my mother-in-law's."
Before heading north through the Gulf, Dennis brushed past the popular tourist island of Key West on Florida's southern tip. State officials said around 100,000 houses and businesses were without power Sunday morning.
The hurricane hit Cuba on Friday with 150 mph (240 kph) winds and crumpled houses, uprooted trees and downed power lines. But its winds weakened to 90 mph (145 kph) as it crossed the island of 11 million people before roaring into the Gulf late on Friday night
Ten people were killed in Cuba and 22 in Haiti.
(Additional reporting by Cathy Donelson in Mobile, Marc Serota in Pensacola and Jennifer Portman in Tallahassee)
Source: REUTERS
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