Hurricane Isaias: Florida declares state of emergency
July 31, 2020Florida Governor Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency on Friday for counties on the Atlantic coast as Hurricane Isaias nears the mainland.
The tropical storm was upgraded to a Cateogory 1 hurricane late on Thursday, after achieving maximum sustained winds of 75 miles (120.7 km) per hour and has hit the Bahamas and the Turks and Caicos Islands en route for the US mainland. It could reach the state as early as Friday night, the US National Hurricane Center (NHC) said.
The NHC warned that heavy rainfall could begin to wreak havoc in "south and east-central Florida late Friday night, potentially resulting in isolated flash and urban flooding."
The weather monitor added that "isolated minor river flooding is possible in [North and South Carolina] early next week."
Read more: Bahamas braces as newly formed Hurricane Isaias bears down
DeSantis: We are fully prepared
Governor DeSantis told media that he had signed an executive order for a state of emergency for east coast counties stretching from Miami-Dade in the south, to Nassau in the north. The order enables the state to mobilize resources much more easily.
"While current projections have the eye of Isaias remaining at sea, the situation remains fluid and can change quickly," DeSantis told reporters. "I want Floridians to know that the state of Florida is fully prepared for this."
Meanwhile, Miami-Dade's beaches, parks, marinas and golf courses were all due to close. County officials have also shut down drive-through and walk-up coronavirus testing locations.
"Our sites, because they're outdoors with tents, if it were to get 40, 50-mile-per-hour winds, it would just collapse," Governor DeSantis said regarding the COVID-19 testing sites. "Safety is paramount for that."
Florida, currently one of the worst-hit states in the US, recorded a single-day high of 257 COVID-19 fatalities on Friday.
jsi/msh (AP, Reuters)