Jeanne Hits Fla. Coast With 120-Mph Winds
NewsMax Wires
Sunday, Sept. 26, 2004
STUART, Fla. -- Hurricane Jeanne barreled up Florida's east
coast early Sunday with 120 mph wind and drenching rain,
unceremoniously putting the weather-weary state in the record
books.
More than a million customers were without electricity,
officials said. The Category 3 storm became the fourth to pummel
Florida in a single hurricane season, something that has not
happened since 1886 when Texas was the target. The three other
hurricanes -- Charley, Frances and Ivan -- have all hit within the
last month and a half, about midway through the June-to-November
season.
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Jeanne came ashore shortly before midnight near the southern tip
of Hutchinson Island, about 5 miles southeast of Stuart. Just three
weeks ago, Frances ravaged the same area.
Angry swells licked pieces of mobile homes out to sea. At one of
the causeway bridges leading to the barrier island, a sailboat
bashed against the seawall and sank. Within minutes, all that
remained above water was less than a foot of its yellow mast.
Debris left from the other hurricanes flew through the air as
Jeanne made landfall. And the storm did its own damage, ripping off
rooftops and cutting power to hundreds of thousands.
Emergency management officials were waiting until daylight to
assess damage. The previous hurricanes caused billions of dollars
in damage and killed at least 70 people.
Jeanne was expected to make a turn to the north over central
Florida and stay inland over Georgia and the Carolinas through
Tuesday. By early Sunday, it had weakened to a Category 2 storm
with 110-mph top sustained winds.
"God, I hope it's over," Jaye Bell said early Sunday. The
bartender from Jensen Beach rode out the storm at a Ramada Inn in
Stuart.
The proximity of Jeanne and Frances impressed Max Mayfield,
director of the National Hurricane Center in Miami. Mayfield said
it was the "first time ever that we know of" that two hurricanes
landed so close in place and time.
Rainfall totals of 5 to 10 inches were expected in the storm's
path, and flooding could be a major concern because previous
hurricanes had saturated the ground and filled canals, rivers and
lakes.
The storm made even more difficult the formidable job of keeping
the lights on in Florida. Early Sunday, about 1.1 million homes and
businesses were without power, including much of Palm Beach County.
Officials feared the storm could leave millions without
electricity, some for three weeks or more.
Rescued
In Fort Pierce and Port St. Lucie, several people were rescued
from homes during the relative calm of Jeanne's eye. No one was
injured, but the residents "didn't think they were going to make
it through the storm," St. Lucie County sheriff's Capt. Nate Spera
said Sunday.
State officials had urged 2 million people to evacuate. Many
like Ada Dent heeded the warning and took cover in shelters.
"Before I left home, I prayed over my house and I told God it
was in his hands," said Dent, who went to a shelter in West Palm
Beach with her 2-year-old grandson.
In Stuart, parts of the waterproof roof covering at Martin
Memorial Medical Center blew off, said administrative nursing
supervisor Sharon Andre. No injuries were reported.
Elsewhere in Stuart, part of a condominium roof collapsed. One
person was rescued.
About 400 people were transferred from a shelter at an
elementary school in Melbourne after parts of its roof flew off,
police Lt. Jeff Koska said. No one was injured, and the evacuees
were taken to another shelter, he said.
About 100 patients at a similar shelter in Fort Pierce were
transferred after its roof started leaking, but no one was hurt.
In Cocoa Beach about 80 miles north of Stuart, Paul and Ann
Jutras weathered another storm in their reinforced house that they
claimed was hurricane-proof.
Sitting two blocks from the Atlantic Ocean, the structure has
two roofs -- in case one is damaged.
In Frances, "we got pounded for 37 hours, but the wind would
blow for about 20 or 25 minutes and there would be a lull. This
one, it's just not letting up at all," Paul Jutras said.
At 7 a.m. EDT Sunday, Jeanne was centered about 10 miles north
of Sebring and about 50 miles south of Orlando. It was moving
west-northwest at 12 mph.
Earlier, Jeanne tore across the Bahamas, leaving some
neighborhoods submerged under 5 feet of water. No deaths or serious
injuries were reported there, but the storm was earlier blamed for
more than 1,500 deaths in floods in Haiti.
Jeanne followed Charley, which struck Aug. 13 and devastated
southwest Florida; Frances, which struck Labor Day weekend; and
Ivan, which blasted the western Panhandle when it made landfall in
nearby Alabama on Sept. 16. The storms caused billions of dollars
in combined damage and killed at least 70 people in Florida alone.
Officials ran out of time to remove tall piles of debris -- from
branches to sodden furniture and building materials -- that remained
on neighborhood streets, left over from Frances.
Gas stations and businesses were boarded up and deserted, and
law enforcement took to the radio airwaves, saying that anyone who
was outside their homes after the 6 p.m. curfew Saturday would be
jailed.
It was unknown how many people urged to evacuate actually did,
but state officials said more than 42,500 people, many with homes
already damaged by Frances, stayed at shelters.
LaTrease Haliburton reluctantly checked into a West Palm Beach
shelter with her 6-year-old daughter, who has had nightmares since
Frances caved in the bathroom ceiling in her family's apartment.
"I want to make sure my daughter isn't as scared this time,"
Haliburton said.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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