Hurricane Watch issued for Coastal N.C., Sprint's Getting Ready
Due to Hurricane Earl, the National Hurricane Center has issued a hurricane watch and tropical storm watch for portions of my home state -- North Carolina.
From Surf City, N.C. north to Cape Fear, there's a Tropical Storm Watch, meaning tropical storm conditions are expected.
From Cape Fear north to Duck, N.C., including the Pamlico and Albemarle Sounds, there is a Hurricane Watch in place, meaning hurricane conditions are expected.
Our network team in Eastern North Carolina is taking the steps our team in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands took just days earlier because of Earl. They are fueling up our permanent generators at our cell sites and network switches and pre-staging additional portable generators elsewhere across the region.
Elsewhere on the East Coast, our team is standing by as the forecasters make their determination for the rest of the Atlantic Coast. The National Hurricane Center's current guidance is that people, "from Virginia Northward to New England should monitor the progress of Earl."
That's sound advice.
I've lived through several serious storms which have hit the state over the years -- Hugo and Fran were the worst in my parts of the state -- but relatives were impacted by Floyd. In all these cases, flooding was the main culprit and our family lived several hundred miles from the beach.
Sprint also offers the following hurricane preparation tips:
- Keep your wireless phone and backup batteries charged, but be aware that an interruption of wireline and commercial power could affect wireless calls.
- If possible, get extra batteries and charge them.
- In times of commercial power outages, a car adapter for your wireless phone should enable you to recharge the battery.
- Keep phones and necessary accessories in a sealed plastic bag to avoid water damage.
- Load family and emergency numbers into your wireless phone.
- Use your Sprint camera phone to take digital pictures or video of your property and valuables before the storm hits. Upload the images to your personal pictures inbox on www.sprint.com so you have "before" pictures in the event of any storm damage.
- Wireless networks sometimes experience heavy traffic during emergency events, so remember to use Nextel Direct Connect(R) or send a text message.
For more information about Sprint hurricane preparation efforts, or to learn what you can do to prepare in an emergency situation, visit: www.sprint.com/hurricaneinformation.
