Superstorm Sandy causes severe flooding in Ocean City, including the downtown business district. (YouTube image)
By DONALD WITTKOWSKI
Names like Dorian and Humberto have been dominating the news in recent weeks – and with good reason.
Dorian’s devastation in the Bahamas and parts of the Outer Banks in North Carolina and Humberto’s glancing blow to Bermuda show that hurricane season is far from over.
Now, three new tropical storms are spinning in the Atlantic hurricane basin, creating concerns that they could intensify and make landfall.
Ocean City, pummeled by Hurricane Sandy in 2012, along with the rest of the Jersey Shore, is not letting down its guard.
“Even if a hurricane is 100 miles offshore, we’re going to have some effects from it,” said Frank Donato, the city’s emergency management coordinator.
Dorian was 200 miles out to sea from Ocean City while churning up the East Coast and still spawned rough surf and dangerous rip tides in the resort.
With two more months to go in hurricane season – it officially ends Nov. 30 – Donato stressed that the city continues to “keep an eye out.”
Normally, September is the peak hurricane time for the East Coast, but Donato noted that Sandy slammed into New Jersey on Oct. 29, 2012.
Early on Oct. 29, Sandy curved to the west-northwest to make its infamous “left turn” onshore as a post-tropical cyclone with hurricane-force winds.
“It’s definitely the new benchmark for what we can prepare for in Ocean City,” Donato said of Sandy.

Frank Donato, Ocean City's emergency management coordinator, assures that the resort is prepared for storms.
Storm preparations should also include making plans to stay with friends or family members who live offshore or at hotels that are located inland, Donato added.
During storms, the city government will implement its own plans to protect the island and recover afterward, including using heavy equipment to help rescue people or clean up damage.
Overall, Donato expressed confidence that the city is ready for future storms, in part because of the lessons learned from Hurricane Sandy.
“We have a great team assembled here in the city. We’re always ready for something like this,” he said.