A superstorm that threatened 50 million
people in the most heavily populated corridor in the nation started turning
Monday, forecasters said.
Hurricane Sandy was expected to hook inland
during the day, colliding with a wintry storm moving in from the west and cold
air streaming down from the Arctic.
The National Hurricane Center said early
Monday that the Category 1 hurricane has top sustained winds of 75 mph, with
higher gusts. It is moving toward the north at 14 mph after moving northeast
Sunday night. Hurricane-force winds extend up to 175 miles from the storm's
center. Gale force winds were reported over coastal North Carolina,
southeastern Virginia, the Delmarva Peninsula and coastal New Jersey.
Sandy is about 425 miles southeast of New
York City and the center of the storm is expected to be near the mid-Atlantic
coast on Monday night.
From Washington to Boston, big cities and
small towns were buttoned up against the onslaught of Sandy, with forecasters
warning that the New York area could get the worst of it — an 11-foot wall of
water.
"The time for preparing and talking is
about over," Federal Emergency Management Administrator Craig Fugate said
Sunday as Hurricane Sandy made its way up the Atlantic on a collision course
with two other weather systems that could turn it into one of the most fearsome
storms on record in the U.S. "People need to be acting now."
Forecasters said the hurricane could blow
ashore Monday night or early Tuesday along the New Jersey coast, then cut
across into Pennsylvania and travel up through New York State on Wednesday.
Airlines canceled more than 7,200 flights
and Amtrak began suspending train service across the Northeast. New York,
Philadelphia, Washington and Baltimore moved to shut down their subways, buses
and trains and said schools would be closed on Monday. Boston also called off
school. And all non-essential government offices closed in the nation's
capital.
The New York Stock Exchange said it will be
shut down Monday, including electronic trading. Nasdaq is shutting the Nasdaq
Stock Market and other U.S. exchanges and markets it owns, although its
exchanges outside the U.S. will operate as scheduled.
As rain from the leading edges of the
monster hurricane began to fall over the Northeast, hundreds of thousands of
people from Maryland to Connecticut were ordered to evacuate low-lying coastal
areas, including 375,000 in lower Manhattan and other parts of New York City,
50,000 in Delaware and 30,000 in Atlantic City, N.J., where the city's 12
casinos were forced to shut down for only the fourth time ever.
"We were told to get the heck out. I
was going to stay, but it's better to be safe than sorry," said Hugh
Phillips, who was one of the first in line when a Red Cross shelter in Lewes,
Del., opened at noon.
"I think this one's going to do us
in," said Mark Palazzolo, who boarded up his bait-and-tackle shop in Point
Pleasant Beach, N.J., with the same wood he used in past storms, crossing out
the names of Hurricanes Isaac and Irene and spray-painting "Sandy"
next to them. "I got a call from a friend of mine from Florida last night
who said, 'Mark, get out! If it's not the storm, it'll be the aftermath. People
are going to be fighting in the streets over gasoline and food.'"
However, CBS News correspondent Chip Reid
reports, some, like Ocean City, Md., surfer Brian Dean, said they have decided
to stay.
"We've got everything pretty well
situated, bunkered down, generators, [we'll] hang out, ride it out. We rode out
Irene last year, it wasn't that bad," he said.
Authorities warned that the nation's
biggest city could get hit with a surge of seawater that could swamp parts of
lower Manhattan, flood subway tunnels and cripple the network of electrical and
communications lines that are vital to the nation's financial center.
Sandy was blamed for 65 deaths in the
Caribbean before it began traveling northward, parallel to the Eastern
Seaboard.
Forecasters said the combination of it with
the storm from the west and the cold air from the Arctic could bring close to a
foot of rain in places, a potentially lethal storm surge of 4 to 11 feet across
much of the region, and punishing winds that could cause widespread power
outages that last for days. The storm could also dump up to 2 feet of snow in
Kentucky, North Carolina and West Virginia.
Louis Uccellini, environmental prediction
chief for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, told The
Associated Press that given Sandy's east-to-west track into New Jersey, the
worst of the storm surge could be just to the north, in New York City, on Long
Island and in northern New Jersey.
Forecasters said that because of giant
waves and high tides made worse by a full moon, the metropolitan area of about
20 million people could get hit with an 11-foot wall of water. Reid reports
from Ocean City that sea levels could rise 8 feet above normal - enough to
flood much of the city.
"This is the worst-case
scenario," Uccellini said.
New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg warned:
"If you don't evacuate, you are not only endangering your life, you are
also endangering the lives of the first responders who are going in to rescue
you. This is a serious and dangerous storm."
New Jersey's famously blunt Gov. Chris
Christie was less polite: "Don't be stupid. Get out."
New York called off school Monday for the
city's 1.1 million students and shut down all train, bus and subway service
Sunday night. More than 5 million riders a day depend on the transit system.
Officials also postponed Monday's reopening
of the Statue of Liberty, which had been closed for a year for $30 million in
renovations. The United Nations said it would close Monday and canceled all
meetings at its headquarters.
In Washington, President Obama promised the
government would "respond big and respond fast" after the storm hits.
"My message to the governors as well
as to the mayors is anything they need, we will be there, and we will cut
through red tape. We are not going to get bogged down with a lot of
rules," he said.
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