Southeast Braces For Hanna As Ike Looms
Va., N.C. Declare Emergencies As Tropical Storm Approaches; Hurricane Ike Strengthens In Atlantic
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Members of the Charleston Fire Department fill sandbags for local residents under I-26 in Charleston, S.C. as they prepare for Tropical Storm Hanna and Hurricane Ike on Thursday, Sept. 4, 2008. (AP Photo/Alice Keeney)
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A man leads children through a flooded street after Hurricane Hanna hit the area in Gonaives, Haiti, Wednesday, Sept. 3, 2008. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos)
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A pregnant woman stands in a flooded street after Tropical Storm Hanna hit the area in Gonaives, Haiti, Wednesday, Sept. 3, 2008. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos)
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A map of the Caribbean and North Atlantic Ocean showing three active Tropical Storms (Hanna, Ike and Josephine) is displayed at a town hall meeting with U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson at Camp Blanding in Starke, Fla. on Sept. 3, 2008. (AP/Doug Finger, The Gainesville Sun)
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Play CBS Video Video Hanna Leaves Haiti Devastated Hurricane Hanna blew through the Gonaives region of Haiti leaving it completely flooded. It's the third storm to hit the country in less than three weeks, leaving more than 125 people dead.
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Video Hanna Inundates Haiti "CBS News RAW": Residents from Laestr, Haiti are seen carrying whatever they can through flooding as deep as 2-feet deep.
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Interactive Storm Tracker Follow all the storms of the 2009 season with satellite images, warnings and wind speed charts.
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Photo Essay Hanna's Havoc After hammering Haiti with intense flooding, storm sets sights on the Bahamas, U.S.
Hurricane Ike, a still-more-dangerous Category 4 storm, was advancing from the east.
Hanna blew by the Bahamas late Thursday, knocking out power to Cat Island and causing minor flooding in other eastern islands, but sparing the Atlantic nation major damage.
U.S. National Hurricane Center said Hanna should reach the coast of North or South Carolina by Saturday, but its sprawling bands of outer winds are likely to hit the U.S. sooner.
Haiti's government more than doubled Hanna's death toll late Thursday to 137. It had previously been 61.
Eighty of the deaths occurred in the flooded region of Gonaives and another 22 people died in areas immediately surrounding the port, according to statements released by the Ministry of the Interior and the Civil Protection Department. The remaining 35 deaths were scattered across Haiti, the statements said.
Gonaives has been almost entirely cut off by Hanna's floodwaters and virtual lakes have formed over every road.
The storm also was blamed for two deaths in Puerto Rico.
Hanna's heart was about 540 miles south of Wilmington, North Carolina, late Thursday night. It was moving toward the northwest near 14 mph.
Its maximum sustained winds were 65 mph, but forecasters said it could become a hurricane before hitting the U.S.
Forecasters expected Hanna to strengthen only slightly before making landfall early Saturday, though hurricane watches remained for much of coastal North and South Carolina.
The governors of Virginia and North Carolina declared states of emergency and officials urged residents to head inland Thursday as Hanna approached. Some residents shuttered houses and stocked up on food and sandbags.
In South Carolina, Gov. Mark Sanford urged people to leave flood-prone areas and mobile homes in two northern counties by Friday afternoon.
In Charleston, S.C., the Kowalsky family is packing fast, reports CBS News correspondent Priya David.
"You just don't know with these hurricanes, you don't know what path they're gonna take," said Larry Kowalsky.
Folks are already boarding up windows and the military is moving aircraft to safety, reports David.
In the Bahamas, Hanna snapped telephone lines in the eastern island of San Salvador as it brushed past, said Quincy Poitier, who answered the phone at the Riding Rock Inn Resort And Marina, but there were no reports of injuries.
"Most certainly I am relieved. We are tranquil," said Stephen Russell, interim director of the Bahamas National Emergency Management Agency.
But he was already worried about Ike and Tropical Storm Josephine behind it.
"As soon as we are clear with Hanna, we have to turn our eyes now on Ike, a powerful one coming ashore," Russell said.
By Thursday afternoon, Ike had maximum sustained winds near 135 mph. It was centered 475 miles north-northeast of the Leeward Islands and forecasters said it could reach the Bahamas by late Sunday or Monday.
Ike is the third major hurricane of the Atlantic season, which runs from June 1 to Nov. 30. The other two were Bertha and Gustav, which was blamed for 112 deaths in the Caribbean, including 76 in Haiti.
Josephine followed behind, with maximum sustained winds near 45 mph.
"We've got three of them on the way. We've just got to be prepared," said Frank Augustine, a 47-year convenience store manager, as he bought 10 five-gallon water jugs under blue skies at a Nassau depot.
Forecasters said it was too early to say if and where Ike might threaten land. FEMA was sending hundreds of truckloads of meals, water and other supplies to the East Coast, agency officials said, but also leaving significant resources on the Gulf Coast in case Ike heads there.
"Ike looks like it's a very, very dangerous storm," said FEMA Administrator David Paulison.
The latest storms come on the heels of Gustav, whose aftermath had Louisiana residents living in shelters and without power.
In 2004, Paulison, then the preparedness director of FEMA, said three major hurricanes in just over a month had strained - but did not ultimately hobble - the agency's resources and staffing.
On Thursday, FEMA officials said they prepared in advance for this season, sending teams to Louisiana while others planned for Hanna.
The American Red Cross was moving supplies, equipment and people into areas Hanna might hit. The organization also was borrowing money to cover expenses that could reach more than $70 million from feeding and sheltering people during Gustav. The organization will probably go deeper into debt as it prepares for the other storms threatening the United States, said Red Cross vice president Joseph Becker.
Only a few dozen of the Bahamas' roughly 700 islands are inhabited, but they are near sea level and have little natural protection. In the south, Hanna knocked out electricity in Mayaguana Island and forced the closure of some small airports including those in Long Island and Acklins Island.
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- send the Obamessia.....He makes the storm a calm, so that the waves thereof are still.
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- What''s the problem? Evacuate these people to New Orleans.
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- Great another Hurrican and another spot for Bush to push off shore drilling.
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- It''s like poor Haiti is cursed or something this year. I hope the next storms (Ike, Josephine, and all the rest that will inevitably follow) spare poor Haiti at some point. They need a break.
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- A """Trail Of Death """
Not THAT !
Why does it have to be a """Trail of Death""" why cant it be a Road of Death or a Path of Death or a Highway of Death or a Tunnel of Death.
Not a TRAIL OF DEATH ! - Reply to this comment
- A """Trail Of Death """
Not THAT ! - Reply to this comment
- Wash. Rinse. Repeat. Okay, IKE, you are up next.
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- Well at least these people have their head above sea level. Not a cess pool below sea level.
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- Tropical Storm Hanna could substantially damage the East Coast of the United States. FEMA should be ready to accept applications for disaster grants. Flooding in that region easily destroys homes and businesses. The U.S. Small Business Administration offers loans for catastrophic recovery.
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Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."




