• Re: Hurricane Fiona brings "catastrophic" flooding, power outages to Pu

    From Welfare Island@21:1/5 to governor.swill@gmail.com on Mon Sep 19 06:19:09 2022
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics, alt.engineering.electrical
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    In article <svje3a$1uiar$4@news.freedyn.de>
    governor.swill@gmail.com wrote:

    Just in time for Democrats to waste more money on a bottomless pit of no value.


    An intensifying Hurricane Fiona is bringing heavy rains, high
    winds and power outages to Puerto Rico. The power has been
    knocked out to the entire island.

    The latest: The center of Fiona was heading for the eastern
    Dominican Republic on Sunday evening, but heavy rainfall and
    "catastrophic" flooding continued to pummel much Of Puerto Rico,
    according to a National Hurricane Center tweet.

    The big picture: The storm is dumping more than two feet of rain
    in Puerto Rico, "causing catastrophic" flooding, the National
    Hurricane Center warns. Hurricane-force winds have taken out the
    island's fragile power grid.

    Fiona made landfall near Punta Tocon, on the island's
    southeastern coast, around 3:20 p.m. local time with maximum
    sustained winds of 85 mph, per an NHC tweet.
    The storm has seen winds increase by 15 mph since the NHC
    updated on then-Tropical Storm Fiona at 8 a.m. ET.
    Zoom in: Fiona is a Category 1 hurricane and is expected to
    remain so through landfall in Puerto Rico.

    Ponce, on the southern side of the island, has seen sustained
    winds of 69 mph with a maximum wind gust of 103 mph, per the
    Hurricane Center.
    President Biden has declared a federal disaster for Puerto Rico,
    mobilizing the delivery of aid to the island.

    Data: National Hurricane Center; Map: Jared Whalen/Axios
    Threat level: The storm was likely to bring torrential rains to
    Puerto Rico through Monday, with a widespread area of 12 to 18
    inches of rain expected. Higher amounts will fall in some
    locations, particularly in higher elevations, where up to 30
    inches could fall in a short period of time.

    "These rains will produce life-threatening and catastrophic
    flash flooding and urban flooding across Puerto Rico and the
    eastern Dominican Republic, along with mudslides and landslides
    in areas of higher terrain," the Hurricane Center warned as of 2
    p.m. Sunday.
    Nearly the entire island was under a flash flood warning as of
    5:00 p.m. ET.
    Meanwhile, heavy rains and hurricane-force winds were expected
    in eastern areas of the Dominican Republic on Sunday night and
    Monday.

    Puerto Rico's power grid, which was severely damaged during
    Hurricane Maria in 2017, has faltered, with nearly 1.5 million
    customers without power as of 7 p.m. ET, according to
    Poweroutage.us.

    What they're saying: "The damages that we are seeing are
    catastrophic," Puerto Rico Gov. Pedro Pierluisi said.

    What we're watching: The test for utility operators now will be
    how quickly they can restore power once the storm passes.

    Of note: NOAA scientists managed to sail a remotely operated
    "Sail Drone" into the eye of Hurricane Fiona, which helped
    validate their intensity estimate.

    Storm surge flooding of 1 to 3 feet above normally dry land is
    expected along the south shore of Puerto Rico on Saturday,
    provided the peak surge hits at high tide.
    The NWS in San Juan was issuing flash flood warnings throughout
    Sunday as the rains cause rivers and streams to rise. Video from
    social media shows torrents of water washing away bridges, power
    lines and other infrastructure in southwestern Puerto Rico.

    The storm previously caused damaging flooding after dumping
    nearly 20 inches of rain on the French island of Guadeloupe late
    last week.
    What's next: Fiona is expected to continue to intensify once it
    moves northwest of Puerto Rico and north of the Dominican
    Republic. The storm is expected to turn slowly to the north by
    midweek as it moves near or over the Turks and Caicos Islands.

    It's expected that the storm will become the season's first
    "major" Atlantic hurricane of the season, at Category 3
    intensity or greater by midweek.
    Most computer models now take the storm out to sea well east of
    the mainland U.S., but it could be a threat to Bermuda late in
    the week.

    https://www.axios.com/2022/09/18/hurricane-fiona-flooding-power- grid-puerto-rico

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