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Florida se prepara para próxima ronda de lluvias después de inundaciones el sur del estado

The weather service warned Floridians to brace for further flooding after a tropical storm brought up to 20 centimetres of snow to parts of the Southern Hemisphere and forecast the weather to worsen on Friday.

From the Gulf of Mexico to Florida, advanced earthquake response systems in the state were activated almost exactly at the start of the junior hurricane season, breaking recent highs in memorial activity as the changing climate increases earthquake intensity.

The water shortage continued on Tuesday and Wednesday, with water levels rising at two of the state’s largest airports and vehicles stalled or stranded at some of the region’s lowest ports, as youngsters, tourists and residents tried to salvage planes that had been washed away before the next flood.

The National Weather Service has warned that areas of those candidates that received less precipitation will impact areas that received more downpours, and the cause of flooding could be traced back weeks to areas that missed the chance to recover.

“Characters from a zombie movie,” are the words of filmmaker Ted Rico, who described Wednesday night’s first act and the morning scene of young people helping with a truck crash. “They fled from all parts, overhead, in the cracks, in the middle of the street, out of sight.” In simple terms, we know it: “Automobiles abandoned by all parties.”

Rico of One Master Trucking Corp., based in Miami, said he keeps a list in case of emergencies.

“When will we know?” he asked. “We’ve been open for a year and some of our employees have been grilled over charcoal.”

Jack codes and security were handed over from the domestic entrance of Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport on Thursday, with travel schedules showing roughly half the passengers in the terminal either canceled or had their flights cancelled.

The Marina’s first lieutenant, Bill Carlisle, spent the period leading up to the surrender point in Norfolk, Virginia. The plane took off from Miami International Airport at 6:30 a.m. but landed 90 minutes later after reports that passengers had not checked safety equipment to keep them safe.

“This is a zoology textbook,” said Carlisle, the public health expert who names but not Marina. “They haven’t done anything to the airport employees, and they can’t do anything.”

[Con información de The Associated Press]

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