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US northeast, Atlantic Canada brace for Hurricane Lee

US northeast, Atlantic Canada brace for Hurricane Lee

 

The northwestern United States and Atlantic Canada are bracing for heavy rainfall, strong winds and 6-metre (20-foot) waves as Hurricane Lee churns over the Atlantic Ocean on its way north.

The National Hurricane Center (NHC) said in Friday morning advisory, that Lee was expecting to create a storm surge that could cause coastal flooding in part of New England, including areas in the US states of New York and Massachusetts.

Maine was also under its first hurricane watch in 15 years as Governor Janet Mills declared a state of emergency on Thursday.

“We continue to strongly urge Maine people – particularly those Downcast – to exercise caution and to take steps to ensure they have what they need to stay safe as the storm draws closer, “ Mills wrote on social media.

The hurricane watch applied to eastern Maine, while the rest of the state and an area extending south through Massachusetts was under a tropical storm warning.

Powerful winds and coastal flooding were expected to arrive Friday afternoon in southern New England and spread north.

In parts of Atlantic Canada under wind warnings,  a dangerous storm surge will produce coastal flooding, the NHC said on Friday. Near the coast, the surge will be accompanied by large and destructive waves.

The Category 1 storm has already affected Bermuda, and is set to reach parts of the US that have already seen a deluge of rain, flooding, sinkholes and tornadoes this week.

Although Lee did not contribute to the flooding that hit New England over the past days, it threatened to exacerbate conditions in a region that is already waterlogged.

The Coast Guard and emergency management agencies warned residents to be prepared, and utility companies brought in reinforcements to deal with any power outages.

At Boothbay Harbor Marina in Maine, the community came together to remove boats from the water to keep them out of harm’s way. “It’s a batten-down-the-hatches kind of day,” owner Kim Gillies said on Thursday. It was traveling north on a path that could lead to landfall in Nova Scotia, possibly as a tropical storm, forecasters said.

 

 

Source: Aljazeera

 

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