The
storm, currently in the Gulf of Mexico, is projected to make landfall
in Florida. The center of the storm is expected to be near the coast by
Thursday night.
Residents
along the Gulf Coast, pounded by heavy rain on Wednesday in advance of
the storm, should be prepared for flooding and storm surges, as Hermine
could bring up to 10 inches of rain, or 20 inches in isolated areas, the
hurricane center said.
"It is
crucial that every Floridian has a plan in place to ensure their
families, homes and businesses are fully prepared," Gov. Rick Scott said
in declaring the state of emergency for 51 of the state's 67 counties.
Hermine
is moving north-northeast at 10 miles per hour, but is expected to gain
speed through Thursday. Strong winds from the storm are expected to
reach the Florida coast in the panhandle region beginning Thursday
night, the hurricane center said. It also warned of dangerous storm
surge and flooding along the Gulf Coast that could be life threatening
from Aripeka to Indian Pass, which is located in central Florida about
50 miles north of Tampa.
Rising waters could reach up to one to seven feet above ground in certain areas.
Forecasts call for the storm to cross Florida before continuing northeast along the coasts of Georgia and the Carolinas.
As
of 7 p.m. ET Wednesday, the storm was about 330 miles south-southwest
of Apalachicola and 300 miles southwest of Tampa, the National Hurricane
Center said.
Previously dubbed Tropical Depression Nine, it strengthened into a tropical storm with 40-mph winds Wednesday afternoon.
A hurricane warning was in effect for the area between Suwannee River westward to Mexico Beach, Florida.
Hermine
would become a hurricane if its sustained wind speeds top 74 mph. If
this happens, it would be the first hurricane to make landfall in
Florida since Wilma in 2005. As of 11 p.m. ET, maximum sustained winds
were near 60 mph.
Catfish in the front yard
Some
places, like Marco Island, were already dealing with high water in the
streets, with residents saying they caught catfish in their flooded
front yards,
CNN affiliate WZVN reported.
"Craziest
thing I ever saw," Darrin Palumbo told the station. "We were driving
home from school, and the road was flipping around and moving. We
finally figured out there was a bunch of catfish flopping around the
road."
The town of Largo in
Pinellas County experienced heavy flooding, with six families having to
move out after water invaded their apartments,
CNN affiliate WFTS reported.
People in Spring Hill, in Pasco County, are still recovering from flooding a few months ago,
WFTS reported. That flood made the road they depend on impassable, Misty Hill said.
"It's going to be 10 times worse," she said.
Residents have been sharing images of high water running through neighborhoods.
In
one video, a man is seen paddleboarding down a street. A photo from
Holmes Beach showed a woman floating on an air mattress in her driveway.
In Anna Maria Beach, cars were splashing as they drove through hubcap-high water in the street.
Two Florida counties are
taking no chances with its oceanside locales. Franklin County, just
southeast of Panama City, issued a mandatory evacuation order for the
coastal towns of St. George Island, Dog Island, Bald Point and Alligator
Point,
the county's emergency management office said.
NFL preseason game changed
Crawfordville Elementary School will open as a shelter at 5 p.m., the county said.
In
Taylor County, farther east, evacuation orders were in place for Dekle
Beach, Keaton Beach, Dark Island, Cedar Island, Steinhatchee, Spring
Warrior, Econfina and Nutall Rise,
CNN affiliate WTXL reported.
Ten offshore oil and gas platforms in the Gulf of Mexico were also evacuated in anticipation of the storm.
Parts
of Florida are already feeling Hermine's effects. In Pinellas County,
the southwest county that is home to Clearwater and St. Petersburg,
schools have already been closed for Thursday and a flood warning is in
effect. Nearby Manatee County also closed schools.
In
nearby Tampa, the Buccaneers' final preseason NFL game against the
Washington Redskins was moved from Thursday night to Wednesday in
expectation of the storm.
The National Weather Service has issued a new online product to help people prepare for the storm.
The storm surge watch/warning graphic highlights spots with the highest risk for "life-threatening inundation from storm surge," the service said.
CNN's Brandon Miller, Madison Park and Mayra Cuevas contributed to this report.
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