The Washington Post - 05.09.2019

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A10 EZ M2 THE WASHINGTON POST.THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5 , 2019


urged residents to be off the
streets by 8 p.m. The city is no
stranger to hurricanes: Last Sep-
tember, slow-moving Florence
drenched the Wilmington area,
causing major flooding on the
Cape Fear River. Officials predict-
ed this storm won’t be as bad but
asked residents to take it s eriously.
Beach communities have been
under an evacuation order since 8
a.m. Wednesday. R esidents of low-
lying areas are urged, but not or-
dered, to move t o shelter on higher
ground. A storm surge of four to
seven feet i s expected.
Duke Energy, the largest utility
provider in the Southeast outside
of Florida, predicts 700,000 peo-
ple will have power outages in the
eastern Carolinas, some possibly
for several days, as Dorian ap-
proaches. The company said in a
news release t hat more than 9,
utility workers are in the C arolinas
to assist with p ower restoration.
To the south, in Charleston,
flooding also is likely. The region
has become more vulnerable be-
cause o f rising sea levels a nd coast-
al development. Since 1996, about
25 percent of the land and wet-
lands around the Church Creek
basin in West Ashley, a suburban
Charleston s ubdivision, have been
filled, according to Andrew Wun-
derley of Charleston Waterkeeper,
a nonprofit environmental watch-
dog g roup.
“When we think about flooding
and h urricanes, the threat to prop-
erty, life and people’s well-being is
obviously very important and top
of mind, but what gets overlooked
is the ecological damage,” he said.
“Floodwater is about the dirtiest
water you can conjure up, full of
oil a nd g rease, herbicides and pes-
ticides, bacteria and pathogens,
and all sorts of nastiness, and
when it drains away after the vis-
ceral event is over, it can still take
years for estuaries and waterways
to recover.”
Dorian’s p ath is near t he f ishing
grounds of commercial fisherman
Mark Marhefka. The more i ntense
the s torm, t he more d amage t o the
ocean f loor and marine habitat, he
said. “The f ish will either bunch up
and bite like crazy, or they’ll be all
stirred up and not want to bite,”
said Marhefka, o f Charleston.
If the electricity on shore is still
out, he’ll have to drag his genera-
tor along to power his electric
scale. “Got to be able to weigh the
catch a nd get the fish to my r estau-
rants,” h e said.
Bechir Slama, manager of the
IHOP restaurant in Bluffton, S.C.,
stayed open f or breakfast Wednes-
day but closed at 1 p.m. so his
employees could return h ome.
“They want to work,” he said.
“This is hurricane season; they
always make good money in the
hurricane season. Tips are always
better.”
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Sacchetti reported from aboard the
U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Paul Clark in
the Atlantic Ocean, Craig from
Jacksonville, Achenbach from
Washington. Jasper Ward in Nassau,
Fenit Nirappil in Daytona Beach, Fla.,
Susan Cooper Eastman in
Jacksonville, Jessica Sparks in
Bluffton, S.C., Stephanie Hunt in
Charleston, S.C., Patricia Sullivan in
Wilmington, N.C., Reis Thebault in
Myrtle Beach, S.C., and Mark Berman,
Felicia Sonmez, John Wagner, Jason
Samenow, Andrew Freedman and
Matthew Cappucci in Washington
contributed to this report.

We dnesday morning. Few cars
were on the roads, and few busi-
nesses were open.
“To say we dodged a bullet from
the storm is an understatement,
obviously we dodged a missile,”
Volusia County Manager George
Recktenwald said.
Eileen Keenan, who chose to
stay in her house a block from the
beach, said her only complaint
was that the coffee shop near her
was closed f or the day.
“We can joke about it and be like
‘ugh,’ but you have to be grateful
that nothing happened and we
were not the Bahamas,” said
Keenan, 53. “Good god, help those
poor people.”
The Carolinas are now facing
their Dorian moment. Some loca-
tions could see as much as five to
eight f eet of storm-surge flooding,
which will come on top of already
unusually high t ides.
Randy Webster, head of the
Horry County Emergency Man-
agement agency in Myrtle Beach,
S.C., w as dismayed t hat only about
15 percent of residents complied
with an evacuation order for part
of the county.
“Your decision to stay and not
evacuate,” Webster said, “means
you may be by yourself for a very
long time.”
As the skies darkened Wednes-
day, Horry Sheriff Phillip Thomp-
son told those who stayed: “Be
calm, hunker down. We’ll get past
it; we’ve been h ere before.”
Officials in Wilmington, N.C.,

ing a red fish. “It’s high tide, and
the water is supposed to be com-
ing over, but all w e got is some rain
showers.”
“Man, my n eighbor is h ome cut-
ting his lawn right now,” added
Gary Williams, 66. “A nd if you go
to the other side of town, you can
probably find people having bar-
becues i n their front lawn.”
As dolphins fed in the river,
Williams and Owens said local
officials h ad o verreacted by order-
ing the evacuation of a quarter-
million residents in Jacksonville,
which has shown a propensity to
flood.
“They made t oo big a deal about
this storm, and they should have
known when it just stopped and
sat over t he B ahamas that it wasn’t
going to make it here to be any-
thing like Irma,” s aid Owens, refer-
ring to t he hurricane that inundat-
ed nearly 1,000 properties here in
2017.
Some residents in Jacksonville
Beach, a barrier island along the
Atlantic Ocean, also questioned
city leaders’ decision to order a
broad evacuation. But Jackson-
ville Mayor Lenny Curry (R)
strongly defended the move, not-
ing it takes 48 hours to successful-
ly evacuate s o many people.
“This is my third storm in four
years,” Curry said. “We know w hat
we are doing.”
In Daytona Beach, Fla., bridges
that had been shut down because
of high wind on Tuesday night
reopened earlier than expected

Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, a Dem-
ocrat.
During a hurricane briefing
with officials in the Oval Office on
Wednesday afternoon, Trump dis-
played what appeared to be a doc-
tored map of Hurricane Dorian’s
projected track as it approached
Florida. The map showed a white
line encircling t he a rea of D orian’s
most likely path — often called the
cone of uncertainty — but there
also was a mysterious black loop
that extended the track into Ala-
bama. Trump had been sharply
criticized on Sunday for a tweet in
which h e claimed, incorrectly, t hat
Alabama was among the states
that would be hit “harder than
anticipated” by the s torm.
As reporters pressed him for
answers later Wednesday, Trump
said he had been told there was a
“95 percent” probability that Ala-
bama would be hit by the hurri-
cane. He denied any knowledge of
whether anyone had d rawn on the
map, saying only: “I don’t know. I
don’t k now. I don’t k now.”
Alabama is safe, as is Florida,
now that Dorian has passed. As
the storm churned north of Flori-
da’s coast, it left many Sunshine
State residents grumbling about
the protracted inconvenience of a
week’s worth of often dire warn-
ings and mandatory evacuations.
“There ain’t nothing coming
this way,” said Jerome Owens, 57,
who was fishing in the St. John’s
River in Jacksonville, using a
croaker as bait in hopes of catch-

chain, and Great Abaco is the
third-most — “and a large portion
of the economy a s well.”
What happened to the northern
Bahamas was something even
worse than the worst-case sce-
nario. Never had a storm so pow-
erful become stationary for so
long over an inhabited place.
Dorian’s murderous 40-hour stall
over Grand Bahama on Sunday
and Monday is something weath-
er experts had not seen.
“Grand Bahama Island may
have just endured the longest
siege o f violent, destructive weath-
er ever observed,” reported The
Washington Post’s Capital Weath-
er Gang. By comparison, Hurri-
cane Michael, which r ipped u p the
Florida Panhandle town of M exico
Beach in October, was a fast-mov-
ing storm in which the wind and
16-foot storm surge did their dam-
age over a couple of hours. Dorian
was stronger, with a storm surge
possibly a s high a s 23 feet — and i t
barely b udged for a day and a half.
The White House said Presi-
dent Trump spoke Wednesday
with Prime Minister Hubert Min-
nis of the Bahamas, offering con-
dolences and promising support
in the disaster r esponse.
On Tuesday night, t he p resident
tweeted that he was signing an
emergency declaration for North
Carolina at the request of Sen.
Thom Tillis (N.C.), whom Trump i s
supporting in the Republican pri-
mary there. But the declaration
was actually requested by North

ies s uch as Savannah, Ga., Charles-
ton and Myrtle Beach in South
Carolina, and Wilmington, just
over the North Carolina b order.
What’s certain is that Dorian is
now a more moderate version of
the storm that hit the northwest
Bahamas o n Sunday.
A storm surge as high as a two-
story building, with waves on top
of that, effectively obliterated the
city of Marsh Harbour on Great
Abaco.
“A n absolute catastrophe.
SEND HELP TO ABACO IS-
LANDS,” tweeted storm chaser
Josh Morgerman after riding out
the storm in Marsh Harbour,
where he said the winds pounded
his concrete building “with the
force of a thousand sledgeham-
mers.”
Family members have gathered
at the helicopter terminal of Nas-
sau’s international airport await-
ing evacuees f rom the A bacos. Ral-
anda McKinney, a 25-year-old
Abacos transplant living in Nas-
sau, was waiting for news of her
parents. Their neighbor, who was
evacuated with severe injuries,
told McKinney that he had seen
her parents at a shelter that was
running out o f food.
“I don’t c are about possessions,”
McKinney said. “I just want to see
their faces.”
Bahamians were becoming in-
creasingly frustrated w ith t he offi-
cial response. Rayven Bootle, 18,
was waiting for word from her
mother, grandmother and others
in the A bacos community of Treas-
ure Cay. She was frustrated that
the government was not letting
people in Nassau carry donated
relief s upplies t o the Abacos.
“It’s been days. Dorian is gone,”
she s aid. “Come o n, w e need t o get
in.”
The names of more than 5,
people have been posted on
DorianPeopleSearch.com, a site
set up to connect loved ones amid
the chaos. It’s unclear how many
are missing or just haven’t been
able to make contact.
U.S. Coast Guard officials pre-
paring to dock in Miami Beach on
Wednesday said they expected to
load up on plastic tarps for shel-
ters — one of the most in-demand
items in the Bahamas — before
delivering those and other sup-
plies t o Nassau on T hursday.
“This is not a short-term recov-
ery,” said Coast Guard Lt. Cmdr.
Kristopher Ensley, captain of the
Paul Clark, one of nine cutters
ordered to the B ahamas. “ For now,
they need food, they need shelter,
they need m edical care.”
The Coast Guard was still field-
ing emergency rescue requests
from the Bahamian government;
people in the United States at-
tempting t o check on relatives and
friends should call the State De-
partment’s O ffice of Overseas Citi-
zens Services at 8 88-407-4747.
A major challenge for the cut-
ters is that the waters around the
islands are full of debris, sunken
bo ats and other hazards.
“You don’t really know what to
expect,” said Ardy Effendi, execu-
tive officer of the Paul Clark. “We
can’t just push through a lot of
debris.”
Theo Neilly, consul general for
the Bahamas in Washington, said
the scale of the destruction is un-
precedented.
“We have not seen a hurricane
of this kind in the country ever
before,” Neilly said. He noted that
Grand Bahama is the second-
most-populated island in the


DORIAN FROM A


hurricane dorian


Outer Banks in crosshairs as Bahamas reels from disaster


Storm-surge potential


1 foot 3 feet 6 feet Populated
places

Atlantic Ocean

Fore
cast^ track^ of^ Dorian

FLA

GEORGIA SOUTH CAROLINA

Jacksonville

Savannah Beaufort
Brunswick
Charleston Myrtle
Beach

2 a.m. Thursday

2 p.m. Thursday

North

50 MILES

TIM MEKO/THE WASHINGTON POST

Source: National Hurricane Center

BY MATTHEW CAPPUCCI
AND ANDREW FREEDMAN

On Wednesday, it appears the
White House attempted to retro-
actively justify a tweet that Presi-
dent Trump issued over the week-
end in which he warned, erro-
neously, that Alabama would be
affected by Hurricane Dorian.
In a White House video re-
leased Wednesday, Trump dis-
plays a modified National Hurri-
cane Center “cone of uncertainty”
forecast, dated 11 a.m. Aug. 29,
indicating Alabama would be af-
fected. The graphic appears to
have been altered to indicate a
risk the storm would move into
Alabama from Florida.
“We had, actually, our original
chart was that it was going to be
hit — hitting Florida directly,”
Trump said as he displayed the
graphic from Aug. 29, which now


includes an appendage extending
the cone into Alabama.
“That was the original chart,”
Trump said. “It could’ve, uh, was
going towards the Gulf,” Trump
explained in the video.
Asked about the altered hurri-
cane forecast chart at a White
House event Wednesday after-
noon, Trump said his briefings
included a “95 percent chance
probability” that Alabama would
be hit. When asked whether the
chart had been drawn on, Trump
said, “I don’t know; I don’t know.”
Trump’s tweet on Sunday came
as Dorian was hitting the Baha-
mas as a high-end Category 5
hurricane, and the tweet sparked
enough public alarm that it
prompted the National Weather
Service in Birmingham, Ala., to
bluntly tweet 20 minutes later:
“A labama will NOT see any im-
pacts from #Dorian.”
Photos posted on the White
House’s Flickr site reveal that
Trump did receive the correct
briefing on Aug. 29 from acting
National Oceanic and Atmos-
pheric Administration head Neil
Jacobs, in which the National
Hurricane Center’s forecast

called for Dorian to hit Florida.
Alabama was never included in
any National Hurricane Center
forecast cone for Dorian, al-
though it was included for a time
in a map on the probability of
tropical storm conditions. But
that showed a low likelihood of

that outcome.
It is not clear whether Trump
was responsible for altering the
forecast chart, but the modified
photo appeared to show Alabama
in Dorian’s eventual line of fire.
The National Hurricane Center’s
text bulletin had included Florida

in its discussion five times, but it
did not mention Alabama. In-
stead, the center urged caution
from residents in “the Bahamas,
Florida, and elsewhere in the
southeastern United States.”
When Trump tweeted his origi-
nal warning to Alabama, the con-
current National Hurricane Cen-
ter forecast called for Dorian to
pass off the Georgia coast, with
the center of Dorian’s expected
track passing 300 miles east of
the Alabama border. The far west-
ern extent of the cone was located
more than 150 miles east of the
Alabama border.
NOAA did not immediately re-
turn a request for a statement
about the altered forecast map,
which has the agency’s official
logo.
The White House did not re-
spond to requests for comment
for this report.
In a Wednesday evening tweet,
Trump defended his Alabama
warning and use of the altered
map by pointing to raw computer
model data provided to state and
local governments on Aug. 28, a
day before his storm briefing with
NOAA and four days before his

Alabama tweet.
The data show the majority of
models called for Hurricane
Dorian to make landfall well
southeast of Alabama, most likely
in Florida. By the time of his tweet
on Sunday, the projections on
that map showing potential im-
pacts on Alabama had long been
ruled out.
Altering official government
weather forecasts isn’t just a
cause for concern — it’s illegal.
Per 18 U.S. Code 2074, which
addresses false weather reports,
“Whoever knowingly issues or
publishes any counterfeit weath-
er forecast or warning of weather
conditions falsely representing
such forecast or warning to have
been issued or published by the
Weather Bureau, United States
Signal Service, or other branch of
the Government service, shall be
fined under this title or impris-
oned not more than ninety days,
or both.”
That l aw a pplies to what is now
known as NOAA’s National
Weather Service, which contains
the National Hurricane Center.
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Trump displays what appears to be an altered map showing risk to Alabama


CHIP SOMODEVILLA/GETTY IMAGES
In a video released Wednesday, President Trump displays an out-of-
date National Hurricane Center map that included an addition to
the cone of uncertainty that extended it into Alabama.

Video comes days after
tweet about Dorian that
caused public alarm

RAMON ESPINOSA/ASSOCIATED PRESS
ABOVE: Clothes were laid out to dry in Freeport, Bahamas, on Wednesday. U.S. Coast Guard officials said they were loading up on tarps
for shelters before taking supplies to Nassau on Thursday. BELOW: The storm eroded beaches and scattered debris in St. Augustine, Fla.

MARIA ALEJANDRA CARDONA/REUTERS
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