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Hurricane Dorian: Trump cancels trip as ‘absolute monster’ set to hit Florida

Unsure where Hurricane Dorian is going to land over Labor Day weekend, many Florida residents faced a sense of helplessness as they prepared for what President Donald Trump said could be an „absolute monster“ of a storm.

„All indications are it’s going to hit very hard and it’s going to be very big,“ Trump said in a video he tweeted Thursday evening, comparing Dorian to Hurricane Andrew, which devastated South Florida in 1992.

The National Hurricane Centre said the Category 2 storm is expected to strengthen into a potentially catastrophic Category 4 with winds of 209km/h and slam into the US on Monday somewhere between the Florida Keys and southern Georgia — a 800km stretch that reflected the high degree of uncertainty this far out.

„If it makes landfall as a Category 3 or 4 hurricane, that’s a big deal,“ said University of Miami hurricane researcher Brian McNoldy. „A lot of people are going to be affected. A lot of insurance claims.“

With the storm’s track still unclear, no immediate mass evacuations were ordered. Along Florida’s east coast, local governments began distributing sandbags, shoppers rushed to stock up on food, plywood and other emergency supplies at supermarkets and hardware stores, and motorists topped off their tanks and filled gasoline cans. Some fuel shortages were reported in the Cape Canaveral area.Josefine Larrauri, a retired translator, went to a Publix supermarket in Miami only to find empty shelves in the water section.

„I feel helpless because the whole coast is threatened,“ she said. „What’s the use of going all the way to Georgia if it can land there?“

In Vero Beach, about 225km up the coast from Miami, Lauren Harvey, 51, scoured the aisles of a nearby supermarket in search for non-perishable food items that could last her throughout the storm.

Harvey, who works in medical billing, is going through a divorce and recently moved from the Philadelphia-area. She said she is not sure what to expect and is preparing to spend her very first hurricane alone.

„I just moved here, so I’m lost,“ she said with a blank expression on her face, after grabbing a couple of water bottles from a scantly-stocked shelf. „I don’t know what I’m going to do.“

Tiffany Miranda of Miami Springs waited well over 30 minutes in line at BJ’s Wholesale Club in Hialeah to buy hurricane supplies. Some 50 vehicles were bumper-to-bumper, waiting to fill up at the store’s 12 gas pumps.

Source: nzherald.co.nz

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