US beachgoers flee Maria as millions suffer in Puerto Rico

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Courtesy: NOAA

It's been one week since Hurricane Maria made landfall in Puerto Rico, and the storm has since downgraded to a tropical storm, but still impacting land.

The U.S. continues to provide aid to the Caribbean islands hit hard by the storm last week. The chief of police in Dominica says death toll has risen to 27 from Hurricane Maria's strike on Caribbean island.

The U.S. Navy evacuated Dominica residents in the aftermath of Maria, including children. Released footage shows navy personnel leading children into helicopters and assisting injured evacuees. The people were evacuated to the nearby islands of Guadalupe and Martinique.

Meanwhile on Puerto Rico, more than 3.4 million U.S. citizens still lack adequate food, water and fuel five days after Maria pounded the island as a Category 4 hurricane. Officials said it may take more than a month to fully restore electrical power.

Just this week, a crew of a U.S. Customs and Border helicopter provided medical aid to three people who signaled for assistance by painting the word "help" on the roof of their Puerto Rico home. The crew landed on a mountain top and trekked down a road that had been swept away by a landslide.

RELATED: Supply drives underway for Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria

Thousands of visitors abandoned their beach vacations as high surf from a weakening Tropical Storm Maria pushed through dunes and under homes Tuesday in North Carolina's Outer Banks.

More than 10,000 visitors were told to leave the North Carolina barrier islands of Hatteras and Ocracoke, but the evacuation orders didn't apply to local residents. They are now resigning themselves to economic losses as well as more flood damage after repeated poundings by tropical weather.

Waves slammed the Avalon Fishing Pier in Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina as Maria was stirring offshore. The 700-foot pier, originally built in 1958, was badly damaged by Hurricane Sandy in 2012.

Sarah Midgett lost her car during Hermine and her home was severely damaged by Matthew's floods last year. Jose then hit the dunes this month, and Maria pushed through the weakened natural barrier, washing over parts of Hatteras.

"It's insane how much the beach has eroded," said Midgett, who moved many of her belongings off her floor, just in case.

Scientists say Maria is expected to erode more than half the dunes along North Carolina's 300-mile (485-kilometer) coast. Beaches in Maryland and Virginia could fare even worse, with two-thirds seeing erosion and the ocean washing over a third of their dunes, according to the U.S. Geological Survey .

In the town of Waves, kite-surfing instructors lost a solid week of reservations after tourists had to evacuate. Adrienne Kina, who normally works as a saleswoman at REAL Watersports, says this storm "is going to screw" the locals again after a dayslong power outage this summer sent 50,000 tourists packing and cost the Outer Banks millions in lost tourism income.

Maria's top sustained winds dropped Tuesday to near 70 mph (115 kph), ending a nine-day run as a hurricane.

The center remained far offshore, centered about 160 miles (260 kilometers) east-southeast of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, and moving north at 7 mph (11 kph). Still, a tropical storm warning was in effect for the North Carolina coast from Bogue Inlet to the Virginia border, and meteorologists predicted a storm surge for Ocracoke Inlet to Cape Hatteras.

Hurricane Lee, meanwhile, was gradually strengthening on a course to remain far from land.

President Donald Trump agreed Tuesday to waive the usual requirement that state governments pay a fourth of the cost of disaster aid, since Maria hit a U.S. territory already mired in financial crisis. Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rossello said he's "confident the president understands the magnitude of the situation."

Federal agencies also announced how they're helping.

The Federal Highway Administration is assessing road damage to facilitate federal money to fix them. The TS Kennedy, a former commercial freighter used by the Maritime Administration for training, is moving from Texas to support the recovery in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

The Federal Transit Administration is helping restore ferry service, which has been available only during daylight hours to transport emergency supplies to Vieques and Culebra.

And the Federal Aviation Administration's reservation system has facilitated nearly 100 daily arrivals and departures at San Juan's Luis Munoz Marin International Airport, including military and relief operations and more than a dozen commercial passenger flights.

Because Maria destroyed or disabled critical radars and navigational aids, the FAA said it has been bringing in replacement systems by air and by sea to restore essential radar, navigation and communication services. A long-range radar in the Turks and Caicos returned to service on Monday morning, giving air traffic controllers a much better picture of planes and helicopters in the region, but technicians were still using chain saws to cut a path through a mountainous rainforest to reach and restore a second long-range radar site at Pico del Este.

In North Carolina, Dare County Emergency Management Director Drew Pearson said officials believe 10,000 to 12,500 people were leaving Hatteras, while about 500 year-round residents could stay.

Hyde County officials said they had about 700 visitors when the evacuation was ordered at Ocracoke, which has about 1,000 permanent residents.

Some of the tourists drove off Monday after only one day of their weeklong vacations.

On Hatteras, Jay Wrenn and his wife packed up for a five-hour drive back home to Burlington, North Carolina. They had arrived at their rented cottage in Rodanthe on Sunday with a week's worth of groceries. By noon Monday, the macaroni salad they made was in the trash.