Tropical
storm Erika could impact Florida this weekend
26
August, 2015
SAN
JUAN, Puerto Rico – Government leaders ordered schools,
airports and even casinos to close and they prepared shelters as
Tropical Storm Erika approached the eastern Caribbean on Wednesday.
The
storm was located about 155 miles east of Antigua and was moving west
at 17 mph with maximum sustained of 45 mph. The storm was not
expected to strengthen over the next two days.
Erika
was forecast to pass near Antigua and Barbuda overnight, with
authorities in the twin-island nation warning of flash floods given
the extremely dry conditions caused by the worst drought to hit the
Caribbean in recent years.
Boats
at Shell Beach Marina on Antigua's north coast have been out of the
water since Saturday, with people not taking chances as Erika
approaches, said Caroline Davy, a marina employee.
She
said many people were caught off-guard when Tropical Storm Gonzalo
battered Antigua last October.
"Too many times we've seen things happen that were not predicted," she said.
Authorities
in the nearby Dutch Caribbean territory of St. Maarten said schools
and government offices would close Thursday. They also asked that
casinos, restaurants and other businesses close by midnight
Wednesday. Officials warned they might temporarily suspend power and
water service as the storm approaches.
The
U.S. National Hurricane Center said Erika would move over or near
parts of the Leeward Islands late Wednesday and then near Puerto Rico
and the Virgin Islands on Thursday.
All
airports in the U.S. Virgin Islands would be closed to incoming
flights until Friday, and government offices would close as well,
said Gov. Kenneth Mapp.
"This
is a fast-moving storm, and so we expect conditions to deteriorate
rapidly," he said.
Tropical
storm warnings were issued for Puerto Rico, the U.S. and British
Virgin Islands and the Leeward Islands. A tropical storm watch was in
effect for the northern Dominican Republic, the Turks & Caicos
Islands and southeastern Bahamas.
The
storm is expected to be near South Florida by Monday, according to
James Franklin, chief hurricane forecaster at the National Hurricane
Center in Miami. But its intensity is still uncertain.
"We
don't know how much of the storm will be left," he said, adding
that it faces strong upper-level westerly winds in the next two to
three days.
Antigua-based
regional airline LIAT and Puerto Rico-based Seaborne Airlines have
canceled more than two dozen flights through Friday because of the
storm, and officials in Puerto Rico said they would suspend ferry
transportation between the main island and the popular sister islands
of Culebra and Vieques starting Thursday. The U.S. Coast Guard said
it would close all ports in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands
on Thursday. Universities across Puerto Rico also announced they
would not hold classes on Thursday.
Meanwhile
in the Pacific, Tropical Storm Ignacio gained some strength. The
storm's maximum sustained winds increased to 65 mph, and it was
expected to strengthen to a hurricane by Thursday.
Ignacio
was centered about 1,365 miles east-southeast of Hilo, Hawaii, and
was moving west at 12 mph.
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