Weather
Hurricane Irma: Evacuees Fly, Drive To Maryland
As Hurricane Irma gets closer to making landfall in Florida, out-of-state residents are packing roads and BWI Airport in Maryland.

BALTIMORE, MD—In Maryland, seeing out-of-state plates is business as usual, but this weekend residents may see more of our southern neighbors as they evacuate from Hurricane Irma. Forecasters say Hurricane Irma could do minimal damage in Maryland, and evacuees are heading toward or passing through the state to avoid the brunt of the storm.
Hurricane Irma is expected to make landfall in Florida Sunday morning, possibly on its western coast. Authorities have ordered mandatory evacuations for parts of Florida like the Keys, parts of Miami-Dade County and the Tampa Bay area, as well as coastal areas of Georgia and South Carolina.
With minimal impact expected from the storm, Maryland appears to be a destination for some evacuees, or at least a path north.
Find out what's happening in Baltimorefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Watch: Hurricane Irma Officially Arrives In Florida
Evacuees have been arriving by plane and car.
Find out what's happening in Baltimorefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
This family is glad to be in #Baltimore - they left #Florida to escape #HurricaineIrma @BWI_Airport pic.twitter.com/YVrLy2ZQvW
— Phil Yacuboski (@WBALPhil) September 8, 2017
Not sure how many evacuees will head as far north as Maryland, but this could impact I-95 here later this afternoon/evening. https://t.co/sPLelRDAGd
— Ed McDonough (@EdMcDonough1) September 8, 2017
Traveling through Maryland today seeing a sea of Florida plates really put Irma in context. #willingtohelp
— J. Adam Thomas (@jadamthomas) September 9, 2017
Some Floridians make their way to Maryland ahead of Irma https://t.co/r34vXGB0Tp pic.twitter.com/qGkBoQsPWP
— WBAL Baltimore News (@wbaltv11) September 9, 2017
Maryland should be ashamed of themselves. All tolls backed up with Florida drivers without ez pass evacuating from #Irma
— Dean Robbins (@ReanDobbins) September 9, 2017
Lots of Florida tagged vehicles on the road today in Maryland. Good luck out there. #irma
— Ren Powell (@DreadyUSCG) September 9, 2017
Family all together in Maryland. Grateful. Love & prayers to my Florida family & friends. for those already hit by #IrmaHurricane2017.
— Susan Revello (@revello_susan) September 9, 2017
Maryland residents are also opening their homes to evacuees while they wait out the storm.
I got room for you up here in Maryland. Already have one Irma escapee here
— Russell Holly (@russellholly) September 9, 2017
I am Willing to offer refuge for those escaping Irma, if you make it to Maryland and need safety. HMU
— Warren finch (@finch_warren) September 9, 2017
SEE ALSO:
- Hurricane Irma: 'Freight Train' Of A Storm Barrels Toward Florida, Georgia, Carolinas
- Hurricane Irma: Maryland Ready With 'Any And All Resources,' Governor Says
As of Saturday morning, Irma was located about 225 miles south of Miami, moving west-northwest at 12 mph. The hurricane has torn through Caribbean, leaving at least 20 people dead in its wake and packing maximum sustained winds of 130 mph.
Pictured in this image, traffic backs in the north-bound lanes of Interstate 75 near the Georgia-Florida state line as people flee Hurricane Irma Friday, Sept. 8, 2017, in Jennings, Fla.. (John Bazemore/Associated Press)
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