Floridians evacuate and grumble as Hurricane Dorian slowly nears
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[September 03, 2019]
By Gabriella Borter and Zachary Fagenson
KISSIMMEE, Fla. (Reuters) - At a retirement
community in central Florida, elderly residents waited for a bus on
Monday to take them to a shelter as one of the most monstrous Atlantic
hurricanes on record crawled toward the state.
Mary McNiff, 92, sat in her wheelchair waiting to board at the Good
Samaritan Society in Kissimmee, near Orlando, one of more than a million
people under evacuation orders along the U.S. East Coast on the Labor
Day holiday.
"Kind of anxious to get it over with," she said before a rare trip off
the property. "I haven't been out for two years really with this leg,"
she said, pointing to a cast on her left leg that she has been wearing
since she had complications with a blood clot.
Hurricane Dorian was still miles out to sea, squatting over the Bahamas
where it had already destroyed homes with maximum sustained winds of 155
miles per hour (249 kph). Forecasters warned it could still be dangerous
as it drew closer to Florida even if its eye did not make landfall in
the state.
The National Weather Service warned of hurricane-strength winds, several
feet of storm surges and the risk of dangerous flash floods along much
of the Florida coastline in the coming days.
Sue Watson, one of McNiff's neighbors, was reluctant to move from the
place she has called home for 14 years.
"I was all set to stay home until they had to turn the water off," she
said as she waited for the bus to pull out. She was not afraid, she
said. "God knows what he's doing and he's in control."
Another Florida resident, Randy Hightower, 71, evacuated from his mobile
home in Daytona Beach to the Volusia County Fair Grounds shelter on
Monday with his wife and dog. He called himself "an old Florida cracker"
and said: "I'm more scared of this one than I've ever been of one in
Florida before."
MANDATORY EVACUATIONS
Nine counties in Florida have ordered mandatory evacuations, while seven
counties have voluntarily evacuations. Farther north, officials in
coastal South Carolina and Georgia ordered hundreds of thousands of
people to leave their homes for shelter.
On what would have usually been a bustling Labor Day holiday, historic
downtown St. Augustine was instead filled with the sound of power saws,
drills and hammers as bay-front businesses fortified themselves against
impending winds and flooding.
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Tricia Cheshire, a resident of Amelia Island sunbathes for the last
few minutes before storms hit the coast before Hurricane Dorian in
Jacksonville, Florida, U.S. September 1, 2019. REUTERS/Maria
Alejandra Cardona
It is the third storm Joy Warren and her husband, Andrew, have
weathered since buying their 16-bedroom waterfront bed and breakfast
more than a decade ago.
"I don't know how many hurricanes it's been through," she said.
"It's still here. I love it. I'm going to get in as soon as I can.
If it's trashed, I'll rebuild again."
The Pedro Menendez High School in St. Augustine has been converted
into a shelter with space for 500 people. Lee Franco headed inside
clutching a pillow and a box of tissues. She had only moved to
Florida six months ago but felt prepared.
"Because I was following the news, I knew what I needed, so we have
sleeping bags, our papers and everything we need," she said. "It's
so boring there, there's nothing to do. You read and play with the
telephone and that's it."
Steven Apuzzi, 49, was hoping he and his three children would get
in. His family has been homeless and arrived at the shelter in a
gray Dodge caravan in which they have been sleeping.
"I'm going through it," he said, describing the problems a single
father faces getting access to shelter. "I don't know if I'm going
to be able to get into this shelter. I'm hoping and praying."
The shelter eventually let him in and he called it a blessing. Once
the hurricane passed, he was not sure where the family would head
next.
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter in Kissimmee and Zachary Fagenson in
St. Augustine; Writing by Jonathan Allen; Editing by Bill Tarrant,
Nick Zieminski and Peter Cooney)
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