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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Tropical Storm Iselle makes landfall on Hawaii

This image provided by NOAA taken at 2 a.m. EDT Friday Aug. 8, 2014 shows Hurricane Iselle approaching the Island of Hawaii, left as Hurricane Julio with a well defined eye follows. (Noaa)
Jennifer Sinco Kelleheraudrey Mcavoy Associated Press

HONOLULU (AP) — The first storm in a one-two punch heading for Hawaii clamored ashore overnight Friday as a weakened tropical storm, while a second system close behind it strengthened and was on track to pass north of the islands.

Tropical Storm Iselle’s eye crossed onto the Big Island about 5 miles east of Pahala with winds at 60 mph at 2:30 a.m. Hawaii Standard Time. Iselle is the first tropical storm to hit the state in 22 years. Hurricane Julio, a Category 3 storm, is some 900 miles behind in the Pacific, packing maximum sustained winds of about 120 mph, but was forecast to weaken and skirt north of all the Hawaiian islands starting sometime Sunday morning.

No deaths or major injuries were reported from Iselle. So far the extent of damage across the Big Island, one of the least populated in the state, has been limited to downed trees and some roof damage, Hawaii County Civil Defense spokesman John Drummond said.

About 21,000 homes remained without power, he said.

The storm is expected to inundate Hawaii with 5 to 8 inches of rain, and up to a foot in some spots.

Drummond said the main part of the storm came ashore in a rural and sparsely populated region and didn’t sweep across the entire island.

“We’re waiting for the storm to move out of the area,” he said. “We’re still getting wind from the outer portions.”

Heavy rains and wind from the storm’s outer bands were also hitting Maui and Oahu on Friday as Iselle moved to the west but south of the other islands.

The Big Island remained under a flash flood warning, with the southern region getting 4 inches of rain per hour.

“From the sense we’re getting from the weather service, I don’t think it’s going to get much worse than this,” Drummond said.

Iselle was downgraded to a tropical storm about 50 miles from shore at 11 p.m. HST Thursday, and within hours its winds had slowed to 60 mph, well below the 74 mph threshold for a hurricane.

Experts said wind shear chopping at the system and the Big Island’s mountainous terrain helped weaken the storm.

“As wind blows into the terrain, the terrain kind of redirects the wind,” said Chris Brenchley, meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Honolulu.

Video shot by Big Island residents showed winds blowing through palm trees, white foamy waves chopping high onto shoreline shrubs and rocks — even a surfer riding rolling waves with an overcast sky on the Big Island’s eastern shore.

“I can’t say I’m too worried,” said Andrew Fujimura, 29, of Puna. “Worst-case scenario, the power may go out a day or two. But we’re prepared for that kind of stuff out here.”

Hundreds of people flowed into emergency shelters set up at high schools on the Big Island, one of which lost power for a time.

On Maui, power to a water treatment plant went out, prompting county officials to ask Kula residents in the middle of the island to conserve water.

People prepared for the storm by making last-minute trips to the store and boarding up windows at their homes.

Hawaii has been directly hit by hurricanes only three times since 1950. The last time Hawaii was hit with a hurricane or tropical storm was in 1992, when Hurricane Iniki killed six people and destroyed more than 1,400 homes in Kauai.

Hawaii Gov. Neil Abercrombie said the state was prepared for the back-to-back storms, noting the National Guard is at the ready and state and local governments were closing offices, schools and transit services across Hawaii.

“What we’re asking the people to do now is pay attention, stay focused and listen to the directions,” he said.

Abercrombie said President Barack Obama had been briefed on Iselle, while Saturday’s primary elections, including congressional and gubernatorial races, will go forward as planned.

As residents prepared for the storms, a 4.5-magnitude earthquake struck the Big Island on Thursday but didn’t cause major damage or injuries.

Travelers faced disrupted plans when at least 50 flights were canceled by several airlines, including Hawaiian Airlines, Delta, United, Air China and WestJet, the Hawaii Tourism Authority said. Some airlines waived reservation change fees and fare differences for passengers who needed to alter their plans Thursday and Friday.

Other attractions also announced plans to stay closed for all or part of Friday, including the Royal Hawaiian Center mall in Waikiki and the Polynesian Cultural Center near Oahu’s north shore.

After high winds hit Maui, California couple Rudy Cruz and Ashley Dochnahl left the island earlier than planned, getting to Oahu but failing to secure a flight back home. “We were trying to beat it, but we now will have to ride it out,” Cruz said.

The storms are rare in Hawaii but not unexpected in El Nino years, a change in ocean temperature that affects weather around the world.

Ahead of this year’s hurricane season, weather officials warned the wide swath of the Pacific Ocean that includes Hawaii could see four to seven tropical storms this year.

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Associated Press writers Oskar Garcia, Cathy Bussewitz and Manuel Valdes in Honolulu; Karin Stanton in Kailua-Kona; Doug Esser in Seattle; Dan Joling in Anchorage, Alaska; and Brian Skoloff in Phoenix contributed to this report.