
Assistant Commissioner of Police Linval Bailey said curfews were in effect until Monday evening. Authorities also cut power on the island to prevent damage to the power grid.The government set up more than 1,000 shelters in converted schools, churches and the indoor national sports arena. Authorities urged people to take cover from the storm, which had maximum sustained winds of 145 mph and could dump up to 20 inches (50 centimeters) of rain. But only 47 shelters were occupied as the storm moved in, said Cecil Bailey of the Office of Disaster Preparedness and Emergency Management. More people trickled in later.As of 11 p.m. (0300 GMT) Sunday, Dean was about 195 miles southeast of Grand Cayman and was traveling west at 20 mph, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said.George Lee, mayor of the Portmore community near the Jamaican capital Kingston, said appeals to evacuate went unheeded. Some islanders said they were afraid for their belongings if they moved to shelters."Too much crime in Kingston.I'm not leaving my home,"Paul Lyn said in Port Royal, east of Kingston.Many tourists who did not get flights out took shelter at places like Sandals Whitehouse, a resort that has buildings capable of withstanding a powerful storm.Trinice Tyler, a postal worker from Lake Elsinore, California, said she would weather the storm there "on my knees praying.""I'm celebrating my 40th birthday today, and it's going to be a birthday to remember," she said. "I have mixed emotions. It's exciting, but I'm nervous. Am I going to make it home?"Earlier in the day, fishermen hauled their skiffs inland and cruise ships changed their course to avoid the storm. Local media reported that 17 fisherman were stranded on the Middle Keys, small islands 90 miles south of Jamaica. The Jamaica Defense Force urged them to break the padlocks off a building to seek shelter, Nationwide News Network reported.The National Hurricane Center said the first hurricane of the Atlantic season was projected to then reach the most dangerous classification, Category 5, with sustained winds of 160 mph, before plowing into Mexico's Yucatan peninsula on Tuesday. The Mexican mainland or Texas could be hit later.In Mexico, tourists also streamed out of resorts on Yucatan peninsula and formed long lines at the airport to try to fly home. Twelve empty planes arrived Sunday to move travelers out, said airport spokesman Eduardo Rivadeneira. The state government set up 530 shelters with a capacity of 73,000 people.The hurricane created massive waves and surges up to 20 feet high as it passed the Dominican Republic on Saturday, flooding roads and drowning a boy. At least two people were killed and about 150 homes were destroyed in Haiti, emergency officials said.
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,293766,00.html
As in the days of Noah...