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Hurricane Dorian whips the Charleston area and brings flooding and tornado threats along the Carolinas

Hurricane Dorian is thrashing coastal South Carolina and threatening a whole day of menace along the Carolinas’ shores, with Charleston’s streets al...
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Hurricane Dorian is thrashing coastal South Carolina and threatening a whole day of menace along the Carolinas’ shores, with Charleston’s streets already flooding, reports of tornadoes popping up in at least two states and tens of thousands of people without power early Thursday.

The Category 3 storm’s center, with sustained winds up to 115 mph, was over the ocean some 70 miles off Charleston by 8 a.m. ET Thursday, looking like it would get a little closer to land before moving along the coast.

Landfall is possible Thursday from South Carolina’s Myrtle Beach to North Carolina’s Outer Banks.

Rain was pummeling coastal areas including Charleston, South Carolina, on Thursday morning, causing street flooding that probably will get worse. Up to 15 inches of rain could fall there, forecasters say, and storm surge could send 4 to 7 feet of water ashore, especially during the afternoon’s high tide.

“Water’s starting to rise and it’s actually coming up to some houses in the area,” storm chaser Aaron Jayjack told CNN from Charleston in the morning.

More than 220,000 homes and businesses were reported without power Thursday morning in Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina.

Meanwhile, tornado watches are in effect for the coastal Carolinas into Thursday afternoon, and the National Weather Service said radar was showing funnel clouds already were forming in parts of the two states.

In North Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, Wayne White said he was checking on some properties he manages when he saw a funnel cloud in a band of rain Thursday morning. The fire department there said vehicles and buildings have been damaged, possibly because a tornado touched down.

“I saw the circular clouds and was going to take a little video, and the funnel came out of nowhere,” he tweeted.

‘Just stay put … until this passes,’ mayor says

More than 1 million people in parts of South Carolina and North Carolina are under mandatory evacuation orders, forecasters said.

The storm’s eyewall could pass less than 40 miles from the Charleston County coast, said meteorologist Steve Rowley with the National Weather Service in Charleston.

South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster declared a state of emergency, and the hurricane center warned of “life-threatening storm surge and dangerous winds, regardless of the exact track of Dorian’s center.”

As conditions began to deteriorate in Charleston early Thursday, emergency management officials requested that people who remained shelter in place, the Charleston Police Department said on Twitter.

Charleston Mayor John Tecklenburg said he wants the city to be a “ghost town” during the storm.

“Just stay put for another six or eight hours until this passes, and then we’re going to clean up and get back to normal quickly,” Tecklenburg told CNN’s John Berman.

Hurricane warning extends to Carolina-Virginia border

A hurricane warning is in effect from north of the Savannah River up to the North Carolina-Virginia border — meaning people in those areas are expected to experience hurricane conditions (with winds of at least 74 mph) at some point.

The storm skirted Georgia’s coast late Wednesday and early Thursday. Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp issued a mandatory evacuation order for six coastal counties, and an emergency was declared for 21 counties in the state.

Virginia also declared a state of emergency Tuesday, expecting possible flooding, storm surge, damaging winds and prolonged power outages, the Virginia Department of Emergency Management said.

“Current predictions indicate that it may affect parts of Virginia,” Gov. Ralph Northam said. “I am declaring a state of emergency to ensure that localities and communities have the appropriate level of assistance, and to coordinate the Commonwealth’s response to any potential impact from Hurricane Dorian.”

Dorian is expected to remain a hurricane over the next few days, the hurricane center said Thursday morning.

An unpredictable path

Days ago, Dorian had been forecast to strike Florida the hardest. But it changed paths, wreaked havoc on the Bahamas and has so far not caused significant damage along Florida’s coast.

Although the state avoided a direct hit, three Florida residents died in incidents related to storm preparations, including a 55-year-old Ocoee man who fell while trimming trees around his house, local officials reported.

A second storm brewing

As Dorian spins along the southeastern US coast, another storm is churning in the Atlantic.

Tropical Storm Gabrielle, with maximum sustained winds of 50 mph, was located 825 miles west-northwest of the Cape Verde Islands Thursday morning, moving at 8 mph, the NHC said.

The storm is not expected to strengthen over the next couple days and, but could slowly intensify by the weekend, the hurricane center said.

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