September 1, 2008
ATLANTA, GA (ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTION)
- Hanna became the fourth hurricane of the Atlantic
hurricane season Monday afternoon and headed toward the
Georgia coast with maximum sustained winds at 75 mph.
Though a storm-forecasting model had Hanna arriving in
Savannah on Friday, officials said the storm could shift and
make landfall anywhere from the Carolinas south to Florida.
�We�re watching Hanna, talking to state partners,�
Ginger Edwards, director of the FEMA Regional Response
Coordination Center, said Sunday. �Our Atlantic states are
paying attention.�
Brandon Bolinski, FEMA�s hurricane program manager, told
representatives from the military, relief organizations and
other federal agencies in a Sunday night briefing winds from
Hurricane Gustav are �imposing a shear on [Tropical Storm]
Hanna. As long as Gustav is around, Hanna can�t get going.�
He said once Gustav has moved over land and dissipated,
Hanna, now in the Atlantic east of the Bahamas, should
gather strength and �start moving,� most likely on
Wednesday.
�It will be formidable,� Bolinski said. �We�ll probably
be turning our attention to it quick.�
Hurricane Hanna has already begun to churn the ocean
waters off the Southeast coast. On Sunday afternoon,
numerous rescues by lifeguards were carried out along the
North Carolina coast and lifeguards along the Georgia coast
reported several rip currents.
Meanwhile, two more systems developing in the Atlantic
Ocean, about halfway between northern Africa and Cuba, and
Bolinski said one of them could be significant.
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