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As Hurricane Sandy nears, 450,000 on East Coast told to evacuate

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Standing on the beach overlooking the Atlantic Ocean as sand blows at his feet, Charles McAleer of Berlin, Maryland, watches the impact of the storm effects from Hurricane Sandy, which has yet to arrive in the region on Sunday, October 28, 2012. (Photo by Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun/MCT)

(MCT) — ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — Hundreds of thousands of people were told to flee low-lying areas, New York and Washington shut down their subways, federal offices and local schools closed, and presidential candidates curtailed their campaigning as Hurricane Sandy roared ever closer to the Eastern Seaboard on Sunday, promising epic storm surges, howling winds and drenching rain across much of the Mid-Atlantic region and Northeast.

Facing the fury of a storm system nearly 1,000 miles wide, at least five states declared emergencies. Airlines canceled more than 7,000 flights, and anxious families and businesses from North Carolina to Maine were warned to expect power blackouts lasting days or longer once the storm makes landfall, probably late Monday night. More than 450,000 people were ordered to evacuate.

With high tides driven by a full moon, forecasters warned of devastating waves and tidal surges 6 to 11 feet above normal that could trigger flash floods and treacherous conditions from New Jersey to southern New England. As far west as Chicago, the National Weather Service cautioned that Lake Michigan’s waves could reach 16 to 22 feet — about four times normal.

“This is a once in a lifetime storm,” said Tom Kines, senior meteorologist at AccuWeather. The damage “is going to be phenomenal.”

The storm — which was expected to get even worse once it slammed into two other weather systems — churned northwest in the Atlantic and appeared likely to slam ashore with winds at or near hurricane force in southern New Jersey. But unlike most hurricanes, the eye of this monster wasn’t the focal point.

“The winds are spread out over a huge area,” said Todd Kimberlain, a forecaster at the National Hurricane Center in Miami. Strong winds “are going to extend all the way up into Boston.”

Hurricane force winds were expected to whip parts of the coastline between Chincoteague, Va., and Chatham, Mass., the weather service said — a distance of 540 miles. Heavy snows were expected when Sandy collided with a cold front.

As federal and state officials scrambled to open shelters and position emergency supplies, President Barack Obama joined a conference call with governors of Maryland, Virginia, Delaware, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Connecticut and Massachusetts, as well as mayors of several major cities.

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