Tropical storm Lane dumps rain on Hawaii
as flood hazard lingers
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[August 25, 2018]
By Jolyn Rosa and Terray Sylvester
HONOLULU (Reuters) - Hawaii was spared a
direct hit by a major hurricane as Lane, once a monster tempest, rapidly
weakened into a tropical storm, even as it unleashed severe flooding on
the Big Island and threatened to drench Oahu and Maui.
Lane, with maximum sustained winds diminishing to near 70 mph (110 kph),
was forecast to slowly make its nearest approach to land just west of
the U.S. Pacific island chain over the weekend, bringing tropical storm
conditions to Maui and the state's most populous island, Oahu, late on
Friday.
More than two feet (60 cm) of rain had fallen in a 36-hour period by
Friday night on the windward side of the island of Hawaii, popularly
known as the Big Island, where the Weather Service reported
"catastrophic flooding." More than 40 inches of rain was recorded in
Piihonua and Waiakea on the island late on Friday, the weather service
said.
Flash flooding and mudslides on the Big Island forced road closures and
evacuations as police and emergency crews conducted numerous rescues of
people stranded in vehicles and homes by high water on Friday.
"Roads all over are impassable due to extreme flooding," said Hawaii
resident Lili Koi on Twitter late on Friday night. "That means
ambulances and even police are not able to get through. Say some prayers
and be safe."
A number of structures on the island of Hawaii were destroyed, said
Melissa Dye, a Weather Service spokeswoman in Honolulu.
She said two Hilo-area neighborhoods were evacuated. But no injuries
were reported.
"I've never seen this, so much devastation of the river flowing down off
of Komohana (River)," said long-time resident Tracy Pacheco in Hilo. "I
just came from Pahale Park, and there's no park."
FORECASTS LESS DIRE
Official bulletins grew less dire through the day. Into the evening,
forecasts made clear that Hawaii had been spared from the threat of its
first direct hit by a major hurricane in a quarter of a century.
Lane was downgraded on Friday to a Category 1, the lowest ranking on the
five-step Saffir-Simpson scale, as it churned through the Pacific south
of Oahu, the National Weather Service said. It was downgraded again to a
tropical storm shortly before 5 p.m. as its maximum sustained wind
speeds fell below 74 mph.
The storm was nearly stationary south of Hawaii on Friday night. It was
expected to move slowly toward the northwest later and then turn west on
Saturday and continue over the weekend, the National Weather Service
said in an advisory.
Forecasts predicted that Lane, which peaked as a Category 5 hurricane
with top sustained winds of 160 mph (260 kph) earlier in the week, to
diminish into a tropical depression by early on Sunday.
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Flood waters cascade down a road in Hilo, Hawaii, U.S., August 24,
2018, in this still image taken from a video obtained from social
media. Hawaii Science and Technology Museum/via REUTERS
The turn of events was welcomed by residents who had spent much of
the past few days stocking up on food, water, gasoline and batteries
and boarding up their windows.
TORRENTIAL DOWNPOURS, EVACUATIONS
Still, the storm posed a considerable weather hazard to large parts
of the state, with the island of Hawaii bearing the brunt of
torrential downpours from Lane.
On Oahu, where 70 percent of Hawaii's 1.4 million residents live,
Honolulu Mayor Kirk Caldwell told the Weather Channel that the city
has moved its emergency-response equipment to higher ground for the
time being.
He said Honolulu, the state's capital and largest city, is
vulnerable to floods and slides because it is partly ringed by
mountains.
"We have asked our residents in these areas where they know it
floods to be ready to leave," Caldwell said, adding that 1,100
people were staying in emergency shelters throughout the city.
New Yorker Rigo Pagoada, 43, who was on vacation on Oahu with his
family, said he felt lucky it had been largely spared.
"We've been very fortunate," he said. "It's sad to see the (impact
on) the Big Island."
Hawaii's major airports remained open during the storm, though 22
flights were canceled at Honolulu's main airport, according to
online tracking service FlightAware.com. Several airlines also
canceled services to Kahului Airport on Maui in anticipation of
severe weather, the state transportation department said.
The governor said travelers should expect congestion at the airports
on Saturday and Sunday from the backlog of canceled flights.
(Additional reporting by Diane Craft in Kailua, Brendan O'Brien in
Milwaukee, Makini Brice in Washington, Alex Dobzinskis in Los
Angeles and Gabriella Borter in New York Writing by Daniel Wallis
and Steve Gorman; Editing by Alison Williams and Helen Popper)
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