Fla. prepares for Isaac on eve of GOP convention

MIAMI (AP) - Officials organized shelters and urged vacationers to leave the Florida Keys as Tropical Storm Isaac approached on Saturday, though preparations farther north focused on getting ready for the Republican National Convention.
Gov. Rick Scott declared a state of emergency to make sure local and state agencies would be ready. The governor said during a media briefing that delegates were being told on how to stay safe during a storm, and officials were ready for storm surge, bridge closures and other problems that could arise during the convention. He also said he was in close communication with local, state and federal agencies, as well as convention officials.
"We are a hospitality state. We know how to take care of people and we want to ensure their safety," Scott said Saturday.
A hurricane warning had been issued for the Keys, though it was still a sunny day in Tampa. Forecast models show Isaac won't hit Tampa head-on, but the storm will still likely lash the city with rain and strong winds just as the convention ramps up. Protests were to start in full force on Sunday afternoon, and demonstrators have vowed that they will make their presence known rain or shine.
Isaac was blamed for at least three deaths after dousing flood-prone Haiti and was expected to scrape eastern Cuba on Saturday. It was forecast to hit the Keys late Sunday or early Monday, and it then could bring stormy conditions to Florida's west coast before moving to the Panhandle.
Still, the storm was days away from the Panhandle. It was sunny and breezy on the beach Saturday in Pensacola, with people out strolling and playing in the sand. Condo associations told people to move furniture inside, but full-scale preparations hadn't yet begun. Waves weren't yet big enough for surfers.
In the Keys, officials said they would open storm shelters and urged vacationers to leave. State officials warned Isaac was a massive storm - even though the eye may not pass over Tampa, tropical storm-force winds extended 230 miles from the center. Key West International Airport was also halting all flights at 7 p.m. Saturday until the storm had passed. As of Saturday morning, 10 flights had been cancelled at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport due to Isaac. Three of the flights were to and from Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
At Miami International Airport, seven flights were cancelled Saturday, including six to and from Port-au-Prince as well as one departure flight to Key West. Airport spokesman Greg Chin said all flights stop only when sustained winds reach 50 mph and the Federal Aviation Administration tower closes and flights cannot be directed. Otherwise, it is the airlines' decision whether to operate flights.
Officials were handing out sandbags to residents in the Tampa area, which often floods when heavy rainstorms hit. Sandbags also were being handed out in Homestead, 20 years after Hurricane Andrew devastated the community there. Otherwise, however, convention preparations were moving ahead as usual.
Groups including Code Pink, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, the AFL-CIO union and Planned Parenthood have already started arriving in Tampa, regardless of the forecast.
Police said even heavy rain could reduce the protesters' ranks, and could also bring relief from another worry: extreme heat.
Flooding and beach erosion is also a concern for southwest Florida. The hurricane warning included the west coast of Florida from Bonita Beach southward.
Gov. Rick Scott declared a state of emergency to make sure local and state agencies would be ready. The governor said during a media briefing that delegates were being told on how to stay safe during a storm, and officials were ready for storm surge, bridge closures and other problems that could arise during the convention. He also said he was in close communication with local, state and federal agencies, as well as convention officials.
"We are a hospitality state. We know how to take care of people and we want to ensure their safety," Scott said Saturday.
A hurricane warning had been issued for the Keys, though it was still a sunny day in Tampa. Forecast models show Isaac won't hit Tampa head-on, but the storm will still likely lash the city with rain and strong winds just as the convention ramps up. Protests were to start in full force on Sunday afternoon, and demonstrators have vowed that they will make their presence known rain or shine.
Isaac was blamed for at least three deaths after dousing flood-prone Haiti and was expected to scrape eastern Cuba on Saturday. It was forecast to hit the Keys late Sunday or early Monday, and it then could bring stormy conditions to Florida's west coast before moving to the Panhandle.
Still, the storm was days away from the Panhandle. It was sunny and breezy on the beach Saturday in Pensacola, with people out strolling and playing in the sand. Condo associations told people to move furniture inside, but full-scale preparations hadn't yet begun. Waves weren't yet big enough for surfers.
In the Keys, officials said they would open storm shelters and urged vacationers to leave. State officials warned Isaac was a massive storm - even though the eye may not pass over Tampa, tropical storm-force winds extended 230 miles from the center. Key West International Airport was also halting all flights at 7 p.m. Saturday until the storm had passed. As of Saturday morning, 10 flights had been cancelled at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport due to Isaac. Three of the flights were to and from Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
At Miami International Airport, seven flights were cancelled Saturday, including six to and from Port-au-Prince as well as one departure flight to Key West. Airport spokesman Greg Chin said all flights stop only when sustained winds reach 50 mph and the Federal Aviation Administration tower closes and flights cannot be directed. Otherwise, it is the airlines' decision whether to operate flights.
Officials were handing out sandbags to residents in the Tampa area, which often floods when heavy rainstorms hit. Sandbags also were being handed out in Homestead, 20 years after Hurricane Andrew devastated the community there. Otherwise, however, convention preparations were moving ahead as usual.
Groups including Code Pink, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, the AFL-CIO union and Planned Parenthood have already started arriving in Tampa, regardless of the forecast.
Police said even heavy rain could reduce the protesters' ranks, and could also bring relief from another worry: extreme heat.
Flooding and beach erosion is also a concern for southwest Florida. The hurricane warning included the west coast of Florida from Bonita Beach southward.
So that's what the sex workers in Miami are calling the GOP Convention: Isaac? Makes sense though it is a biblical name.  Good luck guys and be sure to wear a condom and if they're butch make them wear one and that goes for you ladies too; you never know where those nasty Republican johns have been.
I'm sure someone will come up with a comment how the current administration made a deal with the devil to time a hurricane for Tampa just in time for the convention.
 @HonkeyCat Even worse, we have Americans who would actually believe that kind of stuff because Obama is the antiChrist and all that.Â
 @kennewickmanÂ
World government
United Nations
Weather Machines
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Will the media report on the fact that Mike Huckabee is a key speaker at the convention this year? Why is this important? Mike Huckabee is strongly supporting Todd Akin (legitimate rape) publicly, and has widely denounced those in the party that have thrown Akin under the bus and fed him "to the liberal wolves." Mitt Romney threw Akin under the bus. So did Ryan, so did just about all the Republican leaders.Â
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So what do the Republicans really stand for if Mike Huckabee is going to speak? Is the GOP trying to have it both ways? Is the media going to report on this?Â
 @caphillkidÂ
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Why are libs such as yourself so hung up on two little words "legitimate rape?" That you then try and spin and take out of context to make them appear as something sinister? Because I can give you two examples of "illegitimate rape." Tawana Brawley and the Duke Lacrosse Case ring a bell?
 @ByeByeBarry The fact that you don't get it speaks volumes.Â
 @kennewickmanÂ
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Oh I get it all right. And you are going to get it next November.
 @ByeByeBarry It's amazing to me that you don't even know what he meant. Akin was talking about forcible rape and statutory rape. He used a poor choice of words.
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But that isn't the issue. The issue is his scary Christian beliefs that a woman can decide not to get pregnant from rape sperm.Â
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The issue is that he, and many other Republicans including boy wonder Paul Ryan believe and have passed legislation to allow the government to force a rape victim to bring that baby to term.Â
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 @caphillkidÂ
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You know what is amazing to me? You libs are such hypocrites! The keynote speaker at this years Democrat National Convention has been accused of rape! We all know the degrading manor in which Bill Clinton treats women yet you celebrate him and hold him up as a hero! Then you have the audacity to lecture us on what is wrong with what Akin said. See you losers next November.
 @ByeByeBarry So you would not mind being "legitmately raped?" then.Â
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I mean since it is no big deal and all.
It looks like all the billowing blowing hot air in Florida wont be contained in the Tampa Convertion Center. I sure wonder if Pat Robertson has spoken to God about how He uses natural disasters to punish people.
This just might be the best thing to happen to the Republicans this year. If the power goes out, then people around the country and the world will not get to listen to them and find out just how bat butt crazy these people have become lately.Â
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For example:
http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/08/23/the-crackpot-caucus/?nl=opinion&emc=edit_ty_20120824
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@T H I S
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" If the power goes out"
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If mother nature gives the Republicans a set-back so be it. Stick around and Next Novemeber it will be the Democrats that will be out of power, only it won't be an act of mother nature, it will be the will of the vast majority of the American people. Oh what a shock it's going to be to find out that the majority of Americans think it is the Democrats who are "crazy."
 @ByeByeBarry Yep, there is a giant tsunami of support for Mitt out there if you only rely on the white male vote. If you factor in the fact that he has 0% support among blacks, is dismal in the Latino community and women find him generally creepy it doesn't look so rosy for our ambassador to all things Mormon.Â
 @ByeByeBarry I am sure you woul dbe ok if mother nature gave them a a "set back."
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and by "set back," you mean, people not being bale to watch live on TV how crazy he GOP has been
 @T H I S  They have already switched the speaking roles of some of the crazies to the early days because networks won't be covering those days. Â
 @T H I S Jack Kingston was on Real Time last night. I don't agree with anything he says, but he has my full respect.Â