i told you before those strange clouds that roll in from nowhere and up the beaches are toxic biological clouds released just of shore by submarines and allowed to drift on the prevailing wind inland wake up you see them you get out of there simple
Police have closed beaches from Jupiter Inlet to Carlin Park until further notice and are asking people to leave the area. Health advisories were also issued that affect Martin County beaches and Lake Worth beach. According to Jupiter Police, Palm Beach County Fire Rescue requested the Jupiter beach closure after some beachgoers experienced medical issues. Palm Beach County Fire Rescue says multiple people complained of respiratory and skin irritations along the beaches in northern Palm Beach County. The Florida Department of Health in Palm Beach County issued a health advisory on Saturday afternoon for the next 48 hours. Officials with the department say persons with respiratory allergies should avoid contact with the beaches from Carlin Park North to the Palm Beach County line. The Department says the Department of Environmental Protection, Florida Fish and Wildlife, Palm Beach County, Environmental Resource Management and other state and local agencies are investigating the potential causes of the irritation. Test results will be available within 48 hours. The Martin County Board of Commissioners also issued an advisory for Hobe Sound and Bathtub Beaches on Saturday afternoon. Martin County officials say beach-goers are reporting respiratory issues consistent with Red Tide, which may be present. While Martin County beaches remain open to swimmers, they are advising residents with respiratory issues to avoid Hobe Sound and Bathtub Beaches at this time. And the City of Lake Worth issued a health advisory for Lake Worth Beach, citing respiratory issues consistent with a "Red Tide" algal bloom, which may be present. Officials say the Lake Worth Beach and Pier will be closed to the public and people with respiratory allergies are advised to avoid the beach property. All Lake Worth Casino Building tenants remain open at this time. Lake Worth officials expect to have water test results within 48 hours.
Biological Hazard in USA on September 30 2018 05:26 AM (UTC).
CAP HEADER Base data Geographic information Number of affected people Biohazard information
Common Alerting Protocol information
Category Env Pollution and other environmental
Certainty Observed Determined to have occurred or to be ongoing
Scope Public For general dissemination to unrestricted audiences
Severity Severe Significant threat to life or property
Urgency Past Responsive action is no longer required
Base data
EDIS Number BH-20180930-64856-USA
Event type Biological Hazard
Date/Time September 30 2018 05:26 AM (UTC)
Last update September 30 2018 05:28 AM (UTC)
Cause of event
Reliability of information Authentic source : Information from trusted source (newspapers, emails, websites). Reliability: at least 70%
Damage level High Damage level
Affected area Multi-counties event : Event affected several counties. It can not be more than 50% of the higher-level area (state, province, etc.)
Geographic information
Continent North-America
Country USA
County / State State of Florida
Area Jupiter Inlet area, Martin County beaches and Lake Worth beach
Settlement
Coordinate 26.95, -80.07
Number of affected people / Humanities loss
Dead person(s) 0
Injured person(s) 0
Missing person(s) 0
Evacuated/rescued person(s) 0
Affected person(s) 0
Foreign people 0
Biohazard information
Biohazard level 3/4 - Hight
Biohazard description Bacteria and viruses that can cause severe to fatal disease in humans, but for which vaccines or other treatments exist, such as anthrax, West Nile virus, Venezuelan equine encephalitis, SARS virus, variola virus (smallpox), tuberculosis, typhus, Rift Valley fever, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, yellow fever, and malaria. Among parasites Plasmodium falciparum, which causes Malaria, and Trypanosoma cruzi, which causes trypanosomiasis, also come under this level.
Disease, agent name Red Tide
Infected person(s) 0
Species 2
Status 1
Symptomes