Jamaica and Hispaniola began bracing for what could be a major hurricane this week after the southern Caribbean woke up and gave birth to a rapidly growing Tropical Storm Melissa.
Its maximum sustained winds were around 50 mph, with faster gusts, and tropical-storm-force winds (39 mph to 72 mph) extending 115 miles from the storm’s center. Melissa is expected to continue to grow and become a major hurricane within the next five days.
“Melissa is expected to bring 5 to 10 inches of rain to the southern Dominican Republic, southern Haiti, and eastern Jamaica through Saturday, with locally higher amounts possible,” the National Hurricane Center said, adding that additional heavy rainfall was possible.
Melissa’s center was tagged 320 miles south-southwest of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, and 300 miles southeast of Kingston, Jamaica, as of 5 p.m EDT on Oct. 22. The storm is projected to remain offshore, but is expected to make its closest pass to both islands over the weekend as a hurricane.
Melissa is also expected to turn south and pass below Jamaica while growing into a major hurricane, with maximum sustained winds predicted to reach 130 mph by Oct. 27.
Heavy rainfall is also predicted to extend to Puerto Rico and the northern half of Hispaniola through the weekend, which could trigger flash and urban flooding. Cuba was also advised to monitor the storm.

Melissa is moving incredibly slowly, clocking only 2 mph westward, and the National Hurricane Center noted that the storm’s speed and uncertainty in its track have reduced confidence in the exact rain total predictions.
A tropical storm watch has been in effect for Jamaica’s entire coastline since Oct. 21, along with a hurricane watch for most Haiti’s southern half.







