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USET TEMAC Makes Preparations for Response and Recovery For Possible Impacts of Hurricane Sandy.

10/25/2012 2:51:17 PM

 

Path of Hurricane Sandy

 

For Immediate Release:

United South and Eastern Tribes

Issued at 2:30 PM Central Time

October 25, 2012

(Undated) - - National weather authorities are continuing to analyze models and the impact that Hurricane Sandy may have on the eastern seaboard. In the USET TEMAC service area, the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation, Narragansett Indian Tribe, Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head,
Mohegan Tribe, Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe, and Shinnecock Indian Nation could feel the effects of this storm. Depending on the storm’s path and strength Tribes in Maine could also be affected.

United South and Eastern Tribes, Incorporated (USET) is working with FEMA, Bureau of Indian Affairs, and Indian Health Service to make preparations for response and recovery.

Tribes that are in the potential impact area are encouraged to contact Senior Project Coordinator, Emergency Management, Harrell French to assist with preparations for response and recovery at (615) 467-1636.


Future updates are going to be posted on Hurricane Sandy by the National Weather Service, National Hurricane Center, and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Included in this release are the latest updates. Please check local weather radio, media outlets, as well as the USET website (http://www.usetinc.org) for future weather updates and emergency response information.

 

WASHINGTON (AP) — Government forecasters say a big storm that they're calling "Frankenstorm" is likely to blast most of the U.S. East Coast next week. The storm is an unusual mix of a hurricane and a winter storm. The worst of it could be focused around New York City and New Jersey. Forecasters on Thursday said there's a 90 percent chance that the East will get steady gale-force winds, flooding, heavy rain and maybe snow starting Sunday and stretching past Wednesday.

The hurricane part of the storm is likely to come ashore somewhere in New Jersey on Tuesday morning. NOAA forecasters say the storm is so massive that the effects will be felt along the entire coast from Florida to Maine and inland to Ohio.

 

HAVANA (Reuters) - Hurricane Sandy grew into a major potential threat to the east coast of the United States on Thursday after hammering Cuba's second-largest city and taking aim at the
Bahamas, U.S. forecasters said.

Strengthening rapidly after tearing into Jamaica and crossing the warm Caribbean Sea, Sandy hit southeastern Cuba early on Thursday with 105-mph winds that cut power and blew over trees across the city of Santiago de Cuba. Reports from the city of 500,000 people, about 470 miles southeast of Havana spoke of significant damage, with many homes damaged or destroyed. According to one Cuban radio report, at least one person was killed, bringing the death toll to at least three after fatalities in Jamaica and Haiti.

U.S. government forecasters warned that much of the U.S. East Coast could get swiped by Sandy,
with flooding, heavy rains and high winds from late Thursday. By early next week, it could hit an area of New England where Hurricane Irene caused severe damage last year. Forecasters said the hardest-hit areas could span anywhere from the coastal Carolinas up to Maine, but New York City and the Boston area were also both potentially in harm's way. "It is likely that significant impacts will be felt over portions of the U.S. East Coast through the weekend and into early next week," the National Hurricane Center said.

 

"High Impact Event"

 

"It's going to be a high-impact event," said Bob Oravec, a lead forecaster with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Hydro-Meteorological Prediction Center in College Park, Maryland.

"It has the potential to be a very significant storm with respect to coastal flooding, depending on exactly where it comes in. Power outages are definitely a big threat," he said.

In Cuba, communications were difficult hours after the eye of the dangerous Category 2 hurricane came ashore just west of Santiago de Cuba with waves up to 29 feet and a 6-foot (2-meter) storm surge that caused power outages and extensive coastal flooding, the Cuban weather service said.

The storm and driving rains triggered widespread flooding across the southwestern half of Haiti, with reports of life-threatening landslides in some areas. In the United States, the National Hurricane Center in Miami said at 11 a.m. EDT (1500 GMT) that Sandy had moved well off Cuba's coast and was approaching the central Bahamas with maximum sustained winds of 105 mph.

It was still a Category 2 storm on the Saffir-Simpson scale of hurricane intensity, but some weakening is expected over the next 48 hours as Sandy moves through the Bahamas island chain. High winds, rains and pounding surf are expected across parts of Florida's Atlantic coast, with the biggest impact starting on Thursday night and lasting through Friday. Unlike Irene, which caused billions of dollars in damage as it swept across the U.S. Northeast in August last year, Sandy is forecast to drop below hurricane strength before making U.S. landfall. But it will be moving slower than Irene did, increasing its potential for damage, weather forecasters said.

 

"A Billion Dollar Disaster"

Jeff Masters, a hurricane specialist and blogger with private forecaster Weather Underground(www.wunderground.com) said a landfall on Monday along the U.S. mid-Atlantic coast could trigger "a billion-dollar disaster."

"In this scenario, Sandy would be able to bring sustained winds near hurricane force over a wide stretch of heavily populated coast," he said. Alternately, Masters said, some computer forecast models indicated Sandy had the potential to unleash "the heaviest October rains ever reported in the northeast U.S., Nova Scotia and New Brunswick."

Oravec said there could be tropical-storm to hurricane-force winds on the coast and added:
"Coastal flooding will be a big concern."

A Category 2 storm has winds between 96 and 110 mph, meaning that Sandy was still within a
whisker of becoming a Category 3 hurricane as it bore down on the Bahamas on Thursday.

A tropical storm warning along the Florida east coast has been extended northward to the state's Flagler Beach and a tropical storm watch has been issued for the northeastern Florida coast from Fernandina beach southward to north of Flagler Beach.

Sandy is expected to hit the United States during a full moon, increasing the flood potential, since tides will be at or near their highest.

"There's a big potential for huge effects from the storm," said NOAA's Oravec.

"We can't rule out the potential for snow eventually as we go into the week and the storm moves inland," he said. "There's a lot of indications that there will be potential for heavy snow across part of the Appalachians.

(Reporting By Jeff Franks and Nelson Acosta in Havana, Horace Helps in Jamaica and Jane Sutton in Guantanamo; Writing by Tom Brown; Editing by David Brunnstrom)

 

For more up to the minute information use the link below:

http://www.weather.com/

 

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