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Friday, October 7, 2016

Hurricane Matthew Hits Florida early on Friday Oct 07,2016



Hurricane Matthew's howling wind and driving rain pummeled Florida early on Friday, starting what's expected to be a ruinous, dayslong battering of the Southeast coast. 

The strongest winds of 120 mph were just offshore, but Matthew's wrath still menaced more than 500 miles of coastline and 26 million Americans. 

Government officials declared a state of emergency in several states in an effort to plan ahead since the deadly Category Three storm is expected to wreak havoc with its 120mph winds.



About 1.5 million people in Florida have been told to go inland as the dangerous and life-threatening Category Four storm could become a Category Five and siege on the east coast of the state destroying homes and building structures and knocking down trees.

Forecasters predict it will bring a dangerous storm surge to some parts of the state that will be even worse than what happened in New Jersey during Super Storm Sandy in 2012

Traffic as far as the eye can see: Thousands of families have been caught in gridlock across the state and up the East Coast into the Carolinas and Georgia, as they flee their homes ahead of the storm - while the National Guard trucks drive towards the evacuation zones to assist 

  • Hurricane Matthew started hitting Florida early Friday morning with heavy rain and strong winds
  • Downgraded from a Category 4 to 3 - but that only means a reduction of winds from 130mph to 120mph
  • Powerful storm claimed at least 340 lives after it ripped through the Dominican Republic and Haiti Tuesday
  • Orlando's world-famous theme parks - Walt Disney World, Universal Studios and SeaWorld - all closed 
  • President Barack Obama declared a federal state of emergency in Florida, Georgia and South Carolina
  • Could bring a storm surge of up to 11 feet in some areas and drop up to 15 inches of rain on Florida
  • Already 170,000 have been left without power in Florida and up to seven million more could suffer outages
  • Matthew could also absorb or combine with Hurricane Nicole, which has formed off coast of Bermuda 
  • National Weather Service has advised 'loss of life' and 'immense human suffering' is possible  
  • Two million people in the US were urged to evacuate their homes in preparation for a 'direct hit' 

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