Hurricane Earl: People along the eastern seaboard should be prepared in case evacuations are necessary

An Image provided by Nasa shows Hurricane Earl as is passes over the Leeward Islands Monday Aug. 30, 2010. Hurricane Earl, now a powerful Category 4 storm, barrels toward the U.S. coast early Tuesday Aug. 31, 2010 after battering tiny islands across the northeastern Caribbean with heavy rain and winds that damaged homes and toppled power lines. (AP Photo/NASA)

RALEIGH, N.C. — Federal officials say evacuations may be required in the U.S. if Hurricane Earl tracks too close to the East Coast.

Federal Emergency Management Agency administrator Craig Fugate said Tuesday that people along the eastern seaboard should be prepared in case evacuations are necessary later this week.

Officials will be closely monitoring the movement of the Category 4 storm to determine which parts of the coast will face the greatest impact. It’s too early to tell right now what those might be.

Earl is forecast to potentially brush North Carolina late Thursday before running parallel to land up the East Coast on Friday and Saturday.

FEMA already has teams deployed in the Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico and North Carolina. It has advance teams prepared to work with other states up the coast.

Author: Paola