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Florida governor: Prepare for direct hit from Hurricane Matthew

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Gas lines in Florida. Traffic jams on South Carolina highways. Tourists in North Carolina told to pack.

Hurricane Matthew's outer bands weren't even close to the United States on Tuesday, but the powerful storm's potential path was already causing headaches.

With the Category 4 hurricane expected to brush up to the US East Coast later this week after its deadly assault on the Caribbean, state officials warned residents and visitors to start preparing for some miserable times. Up to 1 million people could face evacuation in South Carolina.

Matthew is an "extremely dangerous" storm, Florida Gov. Rick Scott said, one that made landfall in western Haiti on Tuesday morning. It then headed over eastern Cuba with winds of 140 mph, according to the National Hurricane Center. The Bahamas are next.

The forecast is that Matthew will ride along the Southeast US coast from Florida through the North Carolina Outer Banks from Thursday evening through Saturday. It could make landfall at any point and all areas should be on guard.

Here are how Southern states are preparing for potential effects as Matthew moves north:

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Florida

Gov. Rick Scott told reporters Tuesday that evacuation orders could come later in the day.

"We have to be prepared for a major hurricane," Scott said. "We have to prepare for a direct hit."

The governor told residents along the state's Atlantic coast: "If you are able to leave early, leave now."

Scott plans to activate 500 additional National Guard members by Wednesday morning.

The storm has killed seven people in the Caribbean and Scott said his goal is to make sure no one dies in his state.

"If Matthew directly impacts Florida, there will be massive destruction that we haven't seen in years," he said.

CNN forecasters predict the storm could hit parts of Florida starting Thursday night.

The National Hurricane Center issued advisories for parts of the Florida coast. A hurricane watch extends from Golden Beach to the Volusia/Brevard county line, including Boca Raton, West Palm Beach, Fort Pierce, Vero Beach and Cape Canaveral.

A tropical storm watch has been issued from the central Florida Keys northward to Golden Beach, including Marathon Key, Miami and the Fort Lauderdale metropolitan area.

Scott declared a state of emergency for his entire state.

CNN affiliate WSVN reported long lines at gas pumps at a Costco in North Miami Beach. A reporter with the Sun Sentinel tweeted a photo of one station that had cars waiting but no gas.

Georgia

Gov. Nathan Deal has issued a state of emergency in 13 coastal counties.

"We urge residents in these areas to remain calm but vigilant as they prepare for potential impact," Deal said.

South Carolina

South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, in declaring an emergency, said the state would begin medical evacuations ahead of Hurricane Matthew on Tuesday and coastal evacuations on Wednesday afternoon.

South Carolina Department of Emergency Management Director Kim Stenson said Tuesday morning that more than 1 million people might be affected by evacuation orders.

The department of transportation was already using lane reversals as traffic coming out of coastal cities like Charleston increased. Interstate 26 heading west was bumper-to-bumper Tuesday night, according to CNN affiliate WSPA and a CNN producer.

Schools and government offices in 25 counties will be closed Wednesday. Some schools will be used as evacuation shelters.

North Carolina

Gov. Pat McCrory has declared a state of emergency for more than half of the state's 100 counties.

"Many of our central and eastern counties are already saturated from storms during the past few weeks," Emergency Management Director Mike Sprayberry said. "We are preparing for additional flooding, downed trees and widespread power outages in the coming days."

Authorities in Hyde County have issued a mandatory evacuation order for Ocracoke Island, a popular tourist destination, ahead of Hurricane Matthew. Visitors will evacuate starting at 5 a.m. Wednesday. Resident evacuations begin at 5 a.m. Thursday.