Get all your news in one place.
100's of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Miami Herald
Miami Herald
National
Joey Flechas, Sarah Blaskey and David Ovalle

Still no turn as Hurricane Dorian slows, lashes the Bahamas, rattles Florida's East Coast

MIAMI � Floridians awoke Labor Day to find that Hurricane Dorian had yet to turn north away from the coast as expected, instead stalling to an agonizing crawl while continuing to pound the Bahamas with winds of 165 miles per hour.

The killer system, already blamed for at least one death in the Bahamas, was centered Monday morning less than 120 miles miles off the coast of West Palm Beach. It remains a Category 5 hurricane, and was moving at only 1 mile per hour.

"The core of extremely dangerous Hurricane Dorian will continue to pound Grand Bahama Island through much of today and tonight," the National Hurricane Center said in its 8 a.m. advisory on Monday. "The hurricane will move dangerously close to the Florida east coast tonight through Wednesday evening."

Computer models continued to show the storm turning north before making landfall in Florida, but the proximity to the coast was still concerning. "It is still possible for the hurricane to deviate from this forecast, and move very near or over the coast," the hurricane center wrote. "Users are reminded not to focus on the exact forecast track."

Much of Florida's coast remained under a hurricane or tropical storm watch. Some tropical-storm force are expected to hit Broward County by Monday night. There are no watches or warnings in Miami-Dade.

Instead of Labor Day barbecues, residents across Florida hunkered down in their shuttered homes, already stocked up on gas, water and snacks, glued to television news stations.

Tolls were suspended. Palm Beach International Airport closed on Monday, and flights were due to be suspended at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport at noon.

At Sexton Plaza, a popular beach-side hub in Vero Beach, gawkers took selfies in front of the increasing choppy surf. A blustery wind blew salt and sand as a police officer, Jennifer Brumley, urged them to evacuate east of U.S. Highway 1.

"People have been talking about this turn, but it hasn't turned yet," Brumley said. "It's still heading west. It could turn. We want it to turn, but what if it doesn't?"

Gusts of tropical-storm force winds were starting. One gust of 47 miles per hour was reported at the Juno Beach Pier, according to the National Weather Service.

"It's going north," said Ann Huff, a 30-year Juno Beach resident who huddled under a sea grape tree near the beach with her husband and French Bulldog as a rain squall passed through. "When I was pregnant, I knew I was going to have a boy. I have the same feeling here. It's going north."

Over in the Bahamas, the scope of the historic hurricane's wrath was clear.

Residents in the capital of Nassau were trying to escape rising water in the midst of an island-wide blackout.

On Abaco, at least one child, a 7-year-old boy, was reported drowned, with his sister missing, according to Bahamian press reports. Donald Rolle, the administrator for South Abaco, described the scene on North Abaco as "sheer devastation. "Pray for us," he pleaded.

After pounding the Abacos and leaving a trail of snapped trees, flipped-over cars and missing rooftops in the northern Bahamas, Dorian moved over to low-lying Grand Bahama, where it stalled for hours. The Bahamian press reported that the airport at Grand Bahama Island was under five feet of water.

Islanders reported tidal surges of up to 23 feet. Wind gusts were clocking in at up to a staggering 200 milers per hour. "These hazards will continue over Grand Bahama Island during most of the day, causing extreme destruction on the island," the National Hurricane Center said in a 10 a.m. advisory.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100's of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.