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North Carolina's Outer Banks Reopen To Visitors

flooding along the Outer Banks after Hurricane Maria
Ben Finley
/
AP

Updated 10:15 a.m., Sept. 28

North Carolina's Outer Banks are reopening to tourists after Hurricane Maria brushed past the barrier islands and caused some coastal flooding.Hyde County spokesman Donnie Shumate said in a statement that Ocracoke Island's evacuation order was lifted at 9:30 a.m. Thursday.

Ferries to Ocracoke from Cedar Island and Swan Quarter are back in service. The ferry from Hatteras Island to Ocracoke will start running again at 1 p.m.

The Dare County Sheriff's Office said in a statement that Hatteras Island will reopen to visitors at 1 p.m. Thursday.

Some 10,000 people were ordered off the islands as Maria churned offshore.

The storm pushed water onto the narrow islands from both the Atlantic and the Pamlico Sound, flooding side streets and several stretches of the main highway.

Updated 4:32 p.m., Sept. 27

Maria regained strength and became a hurricane again Wednesday, pushing water over both sides of North Carolina's Outer Banks and taking its time to slowly turn away from the U.S. Atlantic coast.

No injuries have been reported, but the surge of ocean water washed over eroded beaches, flooding properties and state Highway 12, the only road through the narrow barrier islands of Hatteras and Ocracoke.

No ferries were moving, cutting off access to Ocracoke, and with parts of the highway flooded even at low tide, any travel on Hatteras remains hazardous, Dare County Emergency Management Director Drew Pearson said in an email. He said the worst problems were on Hatteras Island, where more than 10,000 visitors left under an evacuation order, but hundreds of local residents were allowed to stay.

The National Hurricane Center said an Air Force Reserve reconnaissance aircraft measured Maria's top sustained winds at near 75 mph (120 kmh), with higher gusts. Its center was about 180 miles (290 kilometers) off Cape Hatteras at 2 p.m. Wednesday.

While Maria's most punishing hurricane-force winds remained offshore, tropical storm-force winds extended for as much as 230 miles (370 kilometers) from the center, churning up the surf on both sides of the islands. The hurricane's forward speed is just 6 mph (9 kph), so the storm was lingering before swinging out to sea.

On Hatteras, a fine rain fell Wednesday, with patches of blue sky occasionally showing through. Police set up a check point to block all traffic except for residents and reporters. As the winds picked up, waves crashed up to and beyond ocean-front homes between the communities of Rodanthe and Avon, where the water has washed under waterfront homes and onto side streets since Tuesday at high tide.

"Mother Nature keeps chopping at it," said Tony Meekins, 55, a lifelong resident of Avon who works as an engineer on the temporarily halted Hatteras-Ocracoke ferry. "We see storm after storm."

Standing near Avon's closed fishing pier, Meekins pointed to where the dune line is gone, pounded down by previous storms. At low tide, a layer of wet sand covered the road.

Chip Stevens owns Blackbeard's Lodge, a 38-unit hotel on Ocracoke. He hopes the highway remains passable on both islands to enable the people and supplies that arrive by ferry to move up and down the island.

This weather is only the latest tropical blow to the Outer Banks, among the most fragile islands in the continental United States. Officials warned that the surge of ocean water and waves would overwhelm sand dunes from both the ocean and from Pamlico Sound, which separates the islands from the mainland.

Bulldozers were in place to push the sand off Highway 12 when water subsides.

That said, Texas, Florida, several small Caribbean islands and Puerto Rico have all seen worse this year.

Puerto Rican officials said electrical power may not be fully restored for more than a month after the grid was destroyed by Maria's Category 4 hurricane winds last week. More than 3 million of the island's U.S. citizens still lack adequate food, water and fuel.

Maria is predicted to erode more than half the dunes along North Carolina's 300-mile (485-kilometer) coast. Beaches in Maryland and Virginia could fare even worse, with two-thirds seeing erosion and the ocean washing over the dunes on one-third of them, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

All that salt water "is like throwing battery acid on your car," said Carrington Erhardt, who worries about driving to the homes she cleans. "That's the biggest thing, is that it destroys the vehicles."

Brent and Donna Bennett, of Buxton, worry about lost wages. He works at an ice cream shop, which is closed, and she can't make it through the floods to her hotel desk job in Hatteras Village.

"Storms are something you come to expect. We seem to have more of our share recently, and I'm over it," Donna Bennet said.

Hurricane Lee, meanwhile, strengthened to a major Category 3 hurricane in the open Atlantic, where it was swinging north and east before damaging winds could reach Bermuda.

The Associated Press is one of the largest and most trusted sources of independent newsgathering, supplying a steady stream of news to its members, international subscribers and commercial customers. AP is neither privately owned nor government-funded; instead, it's a not-for-profit news cooperative owned by its American newspaper and broadcast members.
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