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Sunday, September 15, 2019

Tropical Storm Humberto is forecast to strengthen into a hurricane Sunday

Humberto is moving away from the Bahamas and is currently about 85 miles north of Great Abaco Island and 115 miles northeast of Freeport, according to the National Hurricane Center.
The storm has maximum sustained winds of 60 mph, according to the NHC. But it is slowly strengthening and expected to become a hurricane over Sunday, said CNN meteorologist Derek Van Dam.
It is then expected to move north, offshore from Florida and then away from the US mainland, the NHC said.

Fears of a second storm

There was concern about what Humberto would bring to the Bahamas, where hundreds are still missing after the Category 5 Hurricane Dorian hit the Abaco Islands and Grand Bahama. The death toll currently stands at 50 but search and rescue teams are still searching through destroyed neighborhoods.
3,900 evacuees from the Bahamas have come to south Florida
"Even if you're just talking 2 to 4 inches (of rain), you have to remember a lot of these homes, they don't have roofs on them. A lot of the buildings are already structurally compromised, so even a 50- or 60-mph wind can cause even more damage," CNN meteorologist Allison Chinchar said.
The islands did get some rain, Van Dam said, but did not get Humberto's full impact.
"They were spared the heaviest rain and the strongest winds, which were centered north and east of the storm," Van Dam said, adding the storm surge in the Bahamas was negligible.

Evacuees from Dorian

Many in the Bahamas are still out of their homes following the havoc Hurricane Dorian brought when it struck the islands about two weeks ago.
About 3,900 evacuees have been processed through south Florida by air and sea so far, officials said, with few being turned away.
The number includes US citizens, legal residents, Bahamians and people from other countries who evacuated the islands after the storm hit.
Palm Beach County, Florida, has begun enrolling displaced students fleeing Dorian's damage. Backpacks loaded with school supplies are being provided to the students by the Education Foundation of Palm Beach County, which plans to open its school supply store so evacuated families can shop for free, district spokeswoman Julie Houston Trieste said.

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