NATION Thursday, September 13, 2018 East Oregonian AP Photo/Chuck Burton Page 9A AP Photo/David Goldman Left: Sand bags surround homes on North Topsail Beach, N.C., Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2018, as Hurricane Florence threatens the coast. Right: Marge Brown, 65, says goodbye to her father, George Brown, 90, before he is evacuated from a healthcare home in Morehead City, N.C., Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2018, as Hurricane Florence approaches the east coast. “I’d like to stay and see what happens. I’m 90 plus,” said Brown, a WWII veteran who says he’s survived a plane crash and severe burns from a laboratory fire where he once worked. Storm’s uncertain track sows fear; 10 million in crosshairs By JEFFREY COLLINS Associated Press MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. (AP) — Hurricane Flor- ence put a corridor of more than 10 million people in the crosshairs Wednesday as the monster storm closed in on the Carolinas, uncer- tainty over its projected path spreading worry across a widening swath of the Southeast. Faced with new forecasts that showed a more south- erly threat, Georgia’s gover- nor joined his counterparts in Virginia and North and South Carolina in declar- ing a state of emergency, and some residents who had thought they were safely out of range boarded up their homes. The National Hurricane Center’s best guess was that Florence would blow ashore as early as Friday afternoon around the North Caroli- na-South Carolina line, then push its rainy way westward with a potential for cata- strophic inland flooding. Florence’s nighttime winds were down to 115 mph (185 kph) from a high of 140 mph (225 kph), and the Category 4 storm fell to a Category 3, with a further slow weakening expected as the storm nears the coast. But authorities warned it will still be an extremely dangerous hurricane. “Do you want to get hit with a train or do you want to get hit with a cement truck?” said Jeff Byard, an administrator with the Fed- eral Emergency Manage- ment Agency. Tropical storm-force winds extended 195 miles (315 kilometers) from Florence’s center, and hurricane-force winds reached out 70 miles (110 kilometers). The National Weather Service said 5.25 mil- lion people live in areas under hurricane warnings or watches, and 4.9 million live in places covered by tropical storm warnings or watches. At the White House, President Donald Trump both touted the govern- ment’s readiness and urged people to get out of the way of Florence. “Don’t play games with it. It’s a big one,” he said. As of 8 p.m., the storm was centered 335 miles (540 kilometers) southeast of Wilmington, North Car- olina, moving northwest at 16 mph (26 kph). The hur- ricane center said Florence will approach the coast Fri- day and linger for a while before rolling ashore. As of Tuesday, more than 1.7 million people in the Carolinas and Virginia were warned to clear out. Airlines had canceled nearly 1,000 flights and counting. Home Depot and Lowe’s activated emergency response centers to get generators, trash bags and bottled water to stores Trump comments sting in Puerto Rico amid slow storm recovery on island By DANICA COTO AND ANGELIKI KASTANIS Associated Press SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — President Donald Trump’s assertion that the federal govern- ment’s response to Hurri- cane Maria was “an incred- ible, unsung success” fell flat in Puerto Rico, where islanders are still strug- gling to recover from the devastating storm a year later. “I was indignant,” said Gloria Rosado, a 62-year- old college professor who watched the president’s news conference on TV late Tuesday from San Juan and was still fuming the next day. “The image of my dead husband imme- diately came to my mind ... as well as all the lives that were lost.” Rosado’s husband, who was hospitalized for respi- ratory and renal complica- tions and ultimately suf- fered a heart attack, was one of the estimated 2,975 people who died in the Cat- egory 4 storm’s aftermath when medical resources were strained beyond the breaking point. For many, Trump’s boast about “one of the best jobs that’s ever been done” was hard to square with their daily reality: Blackouts remain com- mon; nearly 60,000 homes are covered by only a makeshift roof not capa- ble of withstanding a Cat- egory 1 hurricane; and 13 percent of municipalities lack stable phone or inter- net service. “Nobody is singing his praises because we all saw what happened,” San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulin Cruz told The Associated Press. “He wasn’t up to the task...and the way that he neglected our lives gave permission to other peo- ple in his administration to look the other way.” Cruz criticized Trump in a series of tweets, includ- ing one that said, “If he thinks the death of 3,000 people (is) a success God help us all.” That reignited a long- standing feud between before and after the storm. The two hardware chains said they sent in a total of around 1,100 trucks. Duke Energy, the nation’s No. 2 power company, said Florence could knock out electricity to three-quarters of its 4 million customers in the Carolinas, and outages could last for weeks. Work- ers are being brought in EARTHLINK INTERNET HIGH SPEED INTERNET AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, File In this Sept. 26, 2017 file photo, Nestor Serrano walks on the upstairs floor of his home, where the walls were blown off, in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria, in Yabucoa, Puerto Rico. Blackouts remain common, and nearly 60,000 homes have only a makeshift roof. the mayor and Trump, who fired back calling her “totally incompetent” and saying the U.S. govern- ment “did an unappreci- ated great job in Puerto Rico.” A July report by the Fed- eral Emergency Manage- ment Agency, or FEMA, noted several shortcom- ings in its response, includ- ing that it underestimated how much food and water would be needed after the storm and that not enough Spanish-speaking aid workers were deployed to the island. At the same time, the agency also faced chal- lenges that were arguably beyond its control such as the sheer force of the mon- ster storm and the logisti- cal difficulties of reaching the Caribbean island over a thousand miles (1,600 kilometers) away from the mainland. And many residents say local officials share much of the blame. Puerto Rico’s government has acknowl- edged that its emergency plans were designed for a Category 1 hurricane, as well as failures to follow those plans and communi- cations breakdowns. Ramon Ruiz, a 56-year- old business owner whose father died from heart problems on Thanksgiv- ing after riding out the hurricane alone at home, pressed up against the door to keep it from caving in, is among those who say both local and federal authori- ties were slow to act. “If it wasn’t for the churches and private orga- nizations, we truly would not have received help from anyone,” Ruiz said. “They are treating us like second-class citizens. ... If we were another state, the response would have been much faster.” In Maria’s aftermath, according to FEMA data analyzed by the AP, approvals for individual assistance checks in Puerto Rico were slower com- pared with what happened with large storms last year. From Sept. 30 to Oct. 7, not one of those checks was approved. On Oct. 8 the approvals began roll- ing again, but with a large spike suggesting a backlog. In addition, data from the U.S. Small Business Administration indicate that approvals for disas- ter loans in Puerto Rico were slow — the first one was not approved until 15 days after the storm was declared, four times as long as with Hurricane Harvey. For Maria, there was a large gap between when the first loan was approved and when loans started ramping up. While 25 per- cent of Harvey loans were OKed within 42 days, for Maria, that didn’t happen until Jan. 9, more than three months after the storm hit. Overall, compared with Harvey and Irma, Maria saw more funds loaned to homeowners rather than business owners. Islanders have also been angered by recent dis- coveries of supplies that never got delivered. A from the Midwest and Flor- ida to help in the storm’s aftermath, it said. Boarding up his home in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, Chris Penning- ton watched the forecasts and tried to decide when to leave. “In 12 or 18 hours, they may be saying different things all over again,” he said. Computer models of exactly what the storm might do varied, adding to the uncertainty. In contrast to the hurricane center’s official projection, a highly regarded European model had the storm turning south- ward off the North Carolina coast and coming ashore near the Georgia-South Car- Get Connected for as low as Get Connected for as low as 14.95/mo. $ 49.99/mo. 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Imagine The Difference You Can Make 1-844-533-9173 Enjov big-time Internet speeds without spending big bucks! photo that emerged Tues- day of thousands of water bottles abandoned on a runway in eastern Puerto Rico prompted local offi- cials to say Wednesday that they were opening an investigation. Ottmar Chavez, the new secretary of the island’s General Services Adminis- tration, said at a news con- ference that Puerto Rican officials requested the water from the U.S. gov- ernment and were sup- posed to pick it up in late May. He said some of it was distributed but people complained that it smelled bad. He added that it was unclear why the remain- der sat on the runway for nearly four months. Shortly after Maria hit last year, Trump vis- ited Puerto Rico and was widely criticized for toss- ing paper towels to storm victims in a manner seen by many as insensitive to the scope of the disaster. His latest remarks once again dredged up those same hurt feelings. “I ignore them because none of them make sense,” said Michelle Cruz, a 48-year-old airline worker whose mother died in December from septicemia after contracting an infec- tion in a hospital during surgery after Maria. “It bothers me and it hurts. But I don’t pay attention to him.” Data journalist Ange- liki Kastanis reported from Los Angeles. Videographer Chris Gillette contributed to this report. The shift in the pro- jected track spread concern to areas that once thought they were relatively safe. In South Carolina, close to the Georgia line, Beaufort County emergency chief Neil Baxley told residents they need to prepare again for the worst just in case. “We’ve had our lessons. Now it might be time for the exam,” he said. In Virginia, where about 245,000 residents were ordered to evacuate low-ly- ing areas, officials urged people to remain away from home despite fore- cast changes showing Flor- ence’s path largely missing the state. Their entire neighbor- hood evacuated in Wilm- ington, North Carolina, David and Janelle Garrigus planned to ride out Florence at their daughter’s one-bed- room apartment in Char- lotte. Unsure of what they might find when they return home, the couple went shopping for a recreational vehicle. “We’re just trying to plan for the future here, not hav- ing a house for an extended period of time,” David Gar- rigus said. Melody Rawson evac- uated her first-floor apart- ment in Myrtle Beach and arrived at Atlanta Motor Speedway in Hampton, Georgia, to camp for free with three other adults, her disabled son, two dogs and a pet bird. “We hope to have some- thing left when we get home,” she said. Forecasters worried the storm’s damage will be all the worse if it lingers on the coast. 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