Hurricane Dean now a category 3 storm
The National Hurricane Center in Miami now says that the Atlantic’s first hurricane has reached category three status, with winds up to 125 mph. Dean is now being called a “major hurricane.”
While the storm is currently moving west through the Carribean, additional strengthening is forecasted within the next 24 hours.
A hurricane watch has now been issued for Hiaiti from the Haiti/Dominican Republic border to Port-au-Prince. The Dominican Republic government has changed the tropical storm watch to a tropical storm warning from Cabo Engano to Haiti. Also, a hurricane watch has now been issued from Cabo Beata to the Haiti.
At 1:45 p.m. EDT, the eye of the Hurricane Dean was 175 miles west of Martinique and 300 miles southeast of San Juan, Puerto Rico.
Tropical storm warnings continue to be in effect for the U.S. Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico as the storm is moving west at 22 mph and could intensify over the warmer waters toward Jamaica.
Dean is currently forecasted to dump 2 inches of rain on Haiti and the Dominican Republic, with a few isolated amounts of up to 5 inches possible.
The National Hurricane Center says it is too early to project whether the storm poses a threat to the U.S..
The storm moved through St. Lucia and Martinique today, causing structural damage, knocking out power, and flooding roads. Also, a 62-year-old man drowned today, being the storm’s first death.
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