Showing posts with label rains. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rains. Show all posts

Monday, October 27, 2014

Bermuda begins cleaning up after Hurricane Gonzalo - Hawaii hit by winds, rains from Hurricane Ana - FOX NEWS WEATHER CENTER

Bermuda Tropical Weat_Cham640360.jpg October 18, 2014: An uprooted tree lies across a sea front street after Hurricane Gonzalo hit the island in Hamilton, Bermuda. (AP Photo/David Skinner)

Crews cleared away downed trees and power lines Saturday after Hurricane Gonzalo battered this tiny, wealthy British territory for several hours but caused no deaths or serious injuries.

The storm’s center crossed over Bermuda late Friday and Gonzalo quickly moved northward over the Atlantic on a track that could take it just off the shore of Newfoundland in Canada early Sunday.

More than 18,000 homes in Bermuda were still without power Saturday night, but Premier Michael Dunkley said cleanup efforts were going smoothly. He said the U.S., Britain and other nations have offered assistance.

“All hands were on deck and worked very well,” he tweeted Saturday night. “Much to be done but we are roaring back!”

Gonzalo approached Bermuda as a Category 3 storm then weakened to Category 2 strength just before coming ashore with sustained winds of 110 mph. Even after beginning to move away, its fierce winds battered the island for hours.

Maria Frith, who owns Grape Bay Cottages on Bermuda’s south coast, said in a phone interview that the hurricane woke her up before dawn when it tore the patio roof off her house.

“To be perfectly honest with you, I was terrified, partly because of the noise,” she said. “It was really scary.”

Some Bermudians woke up to toppled concrete walls, uprooted palm trees and boats run aground. Gonzalo ripped part of the roof off the island’s legislature as well as the roof of an exhibit at the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum & Zoo.

No catastrophic damage was reported on Bermuda, which has one of the highest per-capita incomes in the world and is known for strict building codes meant to ensure homes can withstand sustained winds of at least 110 mph.

Officials had not yet announced whether government offices and schools would reopen Monday. The island’s international airport remained closed Saturday night but officials said it might reopen Sunday afternoon.

The last major hurricane to strike Bermuda was Fabian in September 2003. That Category 3 storm killed three police officers and a civilian and caused more than $100 million in damage.

The island was still recovering from last weekend’s blast from Tropical Storm Fay, which also damaged homes and toppled power lines.

“To be struck twice by two different cyclones is unusual, to say the least,” said Max Mayfield, a former director of the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center said Gonzalo weakened as it moved away from Bermuda on a track that would take it past Newfoundland and then across the Atlantic to Britain and Ireland.

Late Saturday, the storm was centered 360 miles southwest of Cape Race, Newfoundland, with maximum sustained winds of 90 mph as it moved northeast at 39 mph.

Forecasters said it would pass close to Cape Race early Sunday. Officials said there could be some flooding.

Hurricane warnings were in effect for the Grand Banks area, where three major offshore oil installations are located. Operators of the Hibernia, Terra Nova and SeaRose sites announced no plans to evacuate the three crews, which generally total more than 700.

Across the Atlantic, Britain’s meteorological agency issued an alert for strong winds and heavy rain expected Tuesday from the remains of Gonzalo. It warned of the potential for significant disruption of travel and difficult driving conditions.

Gonzalo earlier claimed one life in the Dutch territory of St. Maarten and the hurricane center said it could still whip up dangerous surf on portions of the U.S. coast and Canada.

In southern Mexico, the brief Tropical Storm Trudy was downgraded to a tropical depression as it continued to dump heavy rain. Authorities warned of the danger of flash floods and landslides.


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Bermuda begins cleaning up after Hurricane Gonzalo - Hawaii hit by winds, rains from Hurricane Ana - FOX NEWS WEATHER CENTER

Thursday, October 23, 2014

Days of deadly rains hit Nicaragua

19 October 2014 Last updated at 00:45 Nicaraguan Army personnel carry belongings from residents displaced by heavy rains, which caused flooding and landslides in the capital Managua Oct 18 2014 Nicaraguan Army personnel carry belongings from residents displaced by heavy rains, which caused flooding and landslides in the capital Managua Twenty-two people have died in Nicaragua during several days of heavy rains.

Nine of them were killed in the capital Managua when a wall collapsed during a torrential downpour.

In other areas of the city, emergency crews evacuated families from areas at risk from mudslides.

A government spokeswoman said they would join thousands of people housed in temporary shelters because of downpours since September.

The spokeswoman, Rosario Murillo, said the authorities had decided to evacuate all families who were considered to be living in critical areas of the city vulnerable to flooding and mudslides.

Relatives of flood victims cry during their funeral service at the town of San Isidro de la Cruz Verde Relatives of flood victims during a funeral service in the town of San Isidro de la Cruz Verde Rescuers workers search for bodies after a wall that collapsed during heavy rain in Managua, Nicaragua, early Friday, Oct. 17, 2014 Rescuers workers search for bodies in Managua after a wall that separates the neighbourhood, 18 de Mayo, from another collapsed A young man helps to load a mirror onto to a truck during an evacuation of residents from the 18 de Mayo neighbourhood where nine people died when a wall collapsed in heavy rains, in Managua, Nicaragua, Friday, Oct. 17, 2014. People were forced to evacuate all their belongings after the government removed them to temporary shelters.

“We have to evacuate these people and use the police to guarantee that these spaces are not re-occupied,” she said.

Correspondents say many poorer communities in Nicaragua do not like the places where the government takes them because they tend to be far from urban centres and from their workplaces, and they often return.

Over 30,000 people have been affected by the rains in Nicaragua.

El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala have also been affected.


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Days of deadly rains hit Nicaragua

Sunday, October 19, 2014

Days of deadly rains hit Nicaragua

19 October 2014 Last updated at 00:45 Nicaraguan Army personnel carry belongings from residents displaced by heavy rains, which caused flooding and landslides in the capital Managua Oct 18 2014 Nicaraguan Army personnel carry belongings from residents displaced by heavy rains, which caused flooding and landslides in the capital Managua Twenty-two people have died in Nicaragua during several days of heavy rains.

Nine of them were killed in the capital Managua when a wall collapsed during a torrential downpour.

In other areas of the city, emergency crews evacuated families from areas at risk from mudslides.

A government spokeswoman said they would join thousands of people housed in temporary shelters because of downpours since September.

The spokeswoman, Rosario Murillo, said the authorities had decided to evacuate all families who were considered to be living in critical areas of the city vulnerable to flooding and mudslides.

Relatives of flood victims cry during their funeral service at the town of San Isidro de la Cruz Verde Relatives of flood victims during a funeral service in the town of San Isidro de la Cruz Verde Rescuers workers search for bodies after a wall that collapsed during heavy rain in Managua, Nicaragua, early Friday, Oct. 17, 2014 Rescuers workers search for bodies in Managua after a wall that separates the neighbourhood, 18 de Mayo, from another collapsed A young man helps to load a mirror onto to a truck during an evacuation of residents from the 18 de Mayo neighbourhood where nine people died when a wall collapsed in heavy rains, in Managua, Nicaragua, Friday, Oct. 17, 2014. People were forced to evacuate all their belongings after the government removed them to temporary shelters.

“We have to evacuate these people and use the police to guarantee that these spaces are not re-occupied,” she said.

Correspondents say many poorer communities in Nicaragua do not like the places where the government takes them because they tend to be far from urban centres and from their workplaces, and they often return.

Over 30,000 people have been affected by the rains in Nicaragua.

El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala have also been affected.


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Days of deadly rains hit Nicaragua

Monday, September 8, 2014

Heavy rains, flooding in St Vincent damage homes, hospitalize one

ET-Joshua-Airport E.T Joshua airport (Credit: T?sh?~Na†uralBeau†y®)/Twitter

KINGSTOWN, St. Vincent, Sunday September 7, 2014, CMC - At least one person was hospitalized as a result of torrential rains that caused damage to some houses and flooded sections of Buccament Bay and Kingstown, early Saturday.

The rains, which began before dawn and continued until around 8 a.m. triggered landslides and flash floods in some areas, reminiscent of the trough system on December 24 that left nine confirmed dead, three missing, and extensive damage to infrastructure and housing.

Coconut trees down in Buccament Bay (Credit: richardberridge/Instagram)

Prime Minister Ralph Gonsalves, in an update to the nation around 1:30 p.m. Saturday, said while there were no deaths, someone from the Largo Height area was hospitalized when a wall fell and damaged a house.

Arrangements were being made to have the residents of that house placed in a shelter, said Gonsalves, who has ministerial responsibility for disaster management.

In Trigger Ridge, a community in Central Kingstown, a house was in “a precarious position”, and the government was making alternative arrangement for the family of eight, Gonsalves said.

Chair of the Housing and Land Development Corporation, Berisford Phillips, whose name has been flaunted as a potential candidate for Gonsalves Unity Labour Party in that constituency in the next general election, had visited the two families.

In Rose Place, Kingstown, the National Emergency Management Organization (NEMO) and the Social Welfare visited an elderly man who was affected by the extreme whether and arranged for him to be taken to hospital, Gonsalves said.

Kingstown was flooded and the clean up was already underway, while the main E.T. Joshua Airport, which was also flooded, was expected to remain closed until around 4 p.m.

Gonsalves said there were landslides across the country and two families in Buccament Bay who were affected and will be housed at the RIllan Hill Community Centre.

Several persons from Buccament Bay who were affected by the December floods are still being housed at the community centre in the neighbouring village.

(Credit: richardberridge/Instagram)

Among the houses flooded out in Buccament Bay were two that were also flooded during the Christmas Floods.

Another building, the Buccament Bay Seventh-Day Adventist Primary School, which was flooded in December, was also flooded on Saturday.

Gonsalves said Director of NEMO, Howie Prince, who went to Grenada to attend an event to mark the 10th anniversary of the passage of Hurricane Ivan, was stuck in Barbados on his way back to St. Vincent, and his deputy, Michelle Forbes, is doing a programme in Taiwan.

The Prime Minister said as a result, NEMO is being managed by the third in command, Holda Peters, and assured citizens that the relevant state agencies have been activated.

He said the Roads, Bridges and General Services Authority has been mobilized and information is being communicated across the various agencies.

“Generally speaking, we are on top of things. I have been in touch with the Deputy Prime Minister [and] she in touch with me. We left one of the classrooms at Buccament Bay opened just in case someone had to go in there, even for a temporary basis.

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Heavy rains, flooding in St Vincent damage homes, hospitalize one