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Florida Sees First Mandatory Evacuations in Anticipation of Hurricane Ian

Florida is now seeing its first mandatory evacuations in anticipation of Hurricane Ian, which could bring “life-threatening storm surge” along “much of the Florida West Coast,” according to the National Hurricane Center (NHC).

A mandatory evacuation has been issued for certain parts of Tampa, per Hillsborough County officials.

“A mandatory evacuation order has been issued by @HillsboroughFL for Evacuation Zone A. A voluntary evacuation has been issued for Zone B,” the City of Tampa announced Monday morning. Evacuation zones can be found here.


Schools are also announcing closures, per the Weather Channel:

E​ckerd College in St. Petersburg is shutting down, including closing dorms, at 3 p.m. Monday.

T​he University of South Florida is canceling classes through at least Thursday. The college has campuses in Tampa, St. Petersburg and Sarasota. For now, dorms remain open.

T​he University of Tampa is closing for the entire week, including canceling all classes and shutting down campus offices.

Hurricane Ian is expected to strengthen to a major hurricane this week as it approaches the west coast of the Sunshine State. Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) has declared a state of emergency for all Florida counties, making it clear that the effects will be felt broadly.

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“The impacts will be broad throughout the state of Florida. Don’t get too wedded to those cones where they have the dot going in landfall,” DeSantis said during a press conference Sunday.

“There’s going to be pretty broad impacts throughout throughout the state. … There could be flooding on the east coast of Florida as a result of this. It’s a big storm,” he warned.

The 11 a.m. update from the NHC warns that “hurricane-force winds are possible in the hurricane beach area in west-central Florida beginning Wednesday morning with tropical storm conditions possible by late Tuesday.” It also warns of the possibility of “life-threatening storm surge” along “much of the Florida West Coast, with the highest risk from Fort Myers to the Tampa Bay region.”

Story cited here.

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