Showing posts with label hurricane evacuations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hurricane evacuations. Show all posts

Friday, August 26, 2011

Local Shelter Info - Some ARE Pet Friendly

**I have NO info on the status of any Accomack shelters being pet friendly....or not.  If anyone has info on this please send it to me.** jmmb

WICOMICO COUNTYWicomico Youth & Civic Center
500 Glen Avenue, Salisbury
Pet friendly
OPEN NOW



SOMERSET COUNTY Washington High School
10902 Old Princess Anne Road, Princess Anne
Open at 4 p.m. today for Smith Island evacuees
Open at 8 a.m. Saturday for all other county residents
Pet friendly
** On Saturday beginning at 8 a.m., and running every two hours, buses will be leaving from Crisfield High School — 210 Somerset Avenue, Crisfield — and from the Woodrow Wilson Community Center — 119 S. 7th Street, Crisfield — to go to the shelter at Washington High School.



ACCOMACK COUNTYAccawmacke Elementary School
26230 Drummondtown Road, Accomac, Va.
 

Arcadia Middle School
29485 Horsey Road, Oak Hall, Va.
 

Arcadia High School
8210 Lankford Highway, Oak Hall, Va.
 

Nandua Middle School
20330 Warrior Drive, Onley, Va.
 

Nandua High School
26350 Lankford Highway, Onley, Va.

 Metompkin Elementary School
24501 Parksley Road, Parksley, Va.

OPENS AT 5 P.M. SATURDAY


NORTHAMPTON COUNTY Northampton High School
16041 Courthouse Road, Eastville, Va.
OPENS AT 5 P.M. SATURDAY


WORCESTER COUNTYPocomoke High School
1817 Old Virginia Road, Pocomoke City
Pet friendly
 

Snow Hill High School
305 South Church Street, Snow Hill
 

Stephen Decatur High School
9913 Seahawk Road, Berlin

 Stephen Decatur Middle School
9815 Seahawk Road, Berlin
Pet friendly
ALL SHELTERS OPEN AT 5 P.M. TODAY** People who have special health needs such as medical equipment that requires electricity or oxygen greater than two liters per minute may be eligible for a medically fragile shelter.

For more information, call the Worcester County Health Department at 410-632-4321. This number will be operational until 8 p.m. today and from 8 a.m. until noon on Saturday.

People evacuating to community shelters are reminded to bring their prescribed medication with them. All medication must be administered by the individual or his or her caregiver.


SUSSEX COUNTY Milford Senior High School
1019 N. Walnut Street, Milford
Pet friendly

Beacon Middle School
19483 John J. Williams Highway, Lewes

 Indian River High School
29722 Armory Road, Dagsboro
Pet friendly

ALL SHELTERS OPEN NOW

Thursday, August 25, 2011

From Accomack County Emergency Management Officials

10:30 P.M.  Thursday, August 25, 2011

Issuing Authorities:
Accomack County - Jason R. Loftus, EM Coordinator
Town of Chincoteague – Bryan Rush, EM Coordinator

With regard to the fast approaching and extremely dangerous Hurricane Irene, Accomack County Emergency Management officials are advising all residents to prepare for high winds, 2 to 5 foot of storm surge, freshwater flooding, high waves and tidal flooding conditions beginning Saturday afternoon until Sunday afternoon. Tropical Storm force winds are expected to impact Accomack at approximately noon Saturday. All residents should be secure where they plan to stay during the hurricane before noon Saturday.

Emergency Management is issuing a mandatory evacuation order starting Friday morning at 8:00 am for residents in mobile homes and any homes that are in bayside and seaside evacuation zones. Bayside evacuation areas include all homes generally west of Craddockville Road, Boston Road, Greenbush Road (Rt. 316), Mears Road and Neil Parker Road. Seaside evacuation areas include all homes generally east of Seaside Road, Atlantic Road and Fleming Road. A detailed map of the evacuation zones can be found on the Accomack County website - http://www.co.accomack.va.us/index2.html

Any mobile home should be evacuated as mobile homes may not withstand the high winds expected during this storm.

Areas safe from storm surge and tidal flooding include most of the "spine" of the Eastern Shore – including the towns of Painter, Keller, Melfa, Onley, Parksley, Bloxom, Hallwood and New Church.

Residents should closely monitor their local media outlets or the Accomack County website for additional emergency information.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Residents Of the Shore Watching Are Watching Earl

Hurricane Earl still is the center of attention for Eastern Shore residents this morning. According to the 5 AM advisory Earl has lost a little strength overnight. Highest sustained winds are 125 miles per hour down from 135 earlier and the predicted track has been moved slightly to the East which should make it less likely that we will be experiencing hurricane conditions here. Still, a minor change in the track of Earl could result in major damage on the Shore.

As of now Earl is expected to brush the Outer Banks before moving off to the North Northeast which would take the center a couple of hundred miles off the coast here. The National Hurricane Centers threat map shows that the seaside here has a moderate threat of tropical storm winds when Earl passes. The bayside is showing a low threat as of now. Again, a minor drift to the West would dramatically affect the weather here and what we receive.

Shore residents should monitor Earls progress and be prepared to act if conditions change. As of now no evacuations are contemplated. The main effect of Earl on our weather should be rough surf and strong rip currents. There could be some minor flooding with winds expected to be between 30 and 40 mph, from the northeast late Thursday or early Friday morning. The worst of the winds will occur at the seaside beaches and away from the coast winds should be in the 20 to 30 mph range.

Earl is moving north northwest at 16 mph and should increase in forward speed as it moves north. Thats good news because the worst of the weather here will be relatively brief. However you should avoid going to the barrier islands through the weekend because those strong rip currents and heavy surf will be very dangerous.

Still you should have plans in place to act quickly if necessary. This is the height of the hurricane season and there are other areas of concern moving off Africa which could move our way. Shoredailynews.com has a brand new hurricane preparedness section which contains extensive information including shelter options and flood zone maps for both counties, and tips on what to do before, during and after the storm.

Pictured top: The likelihood of areas experiencing hurricane force winds.

Pictured below: The likelihood of areas experiencing tropical storm force winds.

Charts courtesy of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

www.shoredailynews.com

Earl Weakens To Category 3 Hurricane/Hurricane WATCH Moves Up The East Coast

RALEIGH, N.C.Ocracoke Island tourists were ordered to board the ferries and head for the mainland today and more evacuations could be on the way as powerful Hurricane Earl threatened to sideswipe the East Coast.

The National Weather Service, meantime, extended its hurricane watch up the coast to include the Virginia Hampton Roads localities of Norfolk, Portsmouth, Chesapeake and Virginia Beach, and Northampton County on the Eastern Shore.

Hyde County emergency officials said the evacuation of Ocracoke Island started at 5 a.m. for about 5,000 visitors. The 800 or so year-round residents don’t have to heed it, but Emergency Services Director Lindsey Mooney said officials hope they’ll follow tourists on the 2½ hour trip to shore.

Hyde spokeswoman Jamie Tunnell said about 30 cars, including trucks pulling campers, were lined up to board ferries that would begin leaving Ocracoke Island on the state's Outer Banks for the 2½-hour trip to shore.

"Ferries are the only way off unless you have a private plane or boat," Tunnell said.

The 800 or so year-round residents don't have to heed it, but Emergency Services Director Lindsey Mooney said officials hope they'll follow tourists and leave the island.

The last time the island was evacuated was in 2005 as Hurricane Ophelia approached, shortly after Hurricane Katrina devastated the Gulf Coast.

More evacuations along the Eastern Seaboard could follow, depending on the path taken by the storm, which weakened to a Category 3 hurricane early today as it whipped across the Caribbean with winds of 125 mph.

Earl was expected to remain over the open ocean before turning north and running parallel to the East Coast, bringing high winds and heavy rain to North Carolina’s Outer Banks by late tomorrow or early Friday. From there, forecasters said, it could curve away from the coast somewhat as it makes it way north, perhaps hitting Massachusetts’ Cape Cod and the Maine shoreline on Friday night and Saturday.

Forecasters cautioned that it was still too early to tell how close Earl might come to land. But not since Hurricane Bob in 1991 has such a powerful storm had such a large swath of the East Coast in its sights, said Dennis Feltgen, spokesman for the National Hurricane Center.

“A slight shift of that track to the west is going to impact a great deal of real estate with potential hurricane-force winds,” Feltgen said.

Even if Earl stays well offshore, it will kick up rough surf and dangerous rip currents up and down the coast through the Labor Day weekend, a prime time for beach vacations, forecasters said. Virginia’s governor today planned to declare an emergency, a preliminary step needed to muster emergency personnel should Earl hit the state.

The approaching storm troubled many East Coast beach towns that had hoped to capitalize on the BP oil spill and draw visitors who normally vacation on the Gulf Coast.

Yesterday, gusty winds from Earl’s outer fringes whipped palm fronds and whistled through doors in the Turks and Caicos Islands as tied-down boats seesawed on white-crested surf.

Islanders gathered to watch big waves pound a Grand Turk shore as the wind sent sand and salt spray flying.

“We can hear the waves crashing against the reef really seriously,” Kirk Graff, owner of the Captain Kirks Flamingo Cove Marina, said by telephone as he watched the darkening skies. “Anybody who hasn’t secured their boats by now is going to regret it.”

Carl Hanes of Newport News, Va. , kept an eye on the weather report as he headed for the beach near his rented vacation home in Avon, N.C. He, his wife and their two teenage children were anticipating Earl might force them to leave tomorrow, a day ahead of schedule.

“We’re trying not to let it bother us,” Hanes said before enjoying the calm surf.

In Rehoboth Beach, Del., Judy Rice said she has no plans to leave the vacation home where she has spent most of the summer. In fact, the Oak Hill, Va., resident plans to walk around town in the rain if it comes.

“I kind of enjoy it actually. You know, it’s battling the elements,” Rice said. “I have seen the rain go sideways, and, yeah, it can be scary, but I have an old house here in Rehoboth, so it’s probably more important that I am here during a storm than anywhere.”

In the Florida Panhandle, which has struggled all summer to coax back tourists scared away by the Gulf oil spill, bookings were up 12 percent over last year at the Sandestin Golf and Beach Resort. The resort is nowhere near Earl’s projected path, and spokeswoman Laurie Hobbs said she suspects the increase in reservations was partly because of a discount the hotel is offering and partly because of the hurricane.

“Weather drives business,” she said. “They go to where the weather is best.”

If Earl brings rain farther inland, it could affect the U.S. Open tennis tournament, being played now through Sept. 12 in New York City.

“We’re keeping our eye on it very closely,” said United States Tennis Association spokesman Chris Widmaier.

www.timesdispatch.com