Hurricane Helene live: At least nine dead as 10ft storm surge hits Florida and flash flood emergency in Georgia
Death toll continues to rise after Helene slammed into Florida’s coast as a Category 4 hurricane, marking one of the most powerful storms to strike US in recent memory
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At least nine people have died after Hurricane Helene crashed into Florida as a Category 4 storm, pounding the west coast with “unsurvivable” conditions.
Helene has since been downgraded to a tropical storm but is still packing “life-threatening” conditions as it plows across the county with a flash flood emergency issued for metro Atlanta and as far north as Kentucky’s Appalachia on high alert for heavy rains and landslides.
Hurricane-force wind gusts were still occurring Friday in parts of Georgia and the Carolinas and very heavy rainfall was ongoing for much of the US Southeast, causing historic and life-threatening flooding.
As the sun came up in Florida, the damage was widespread and catastrophic. Storm surge has left some homes underwater to the roofline, and boats were smashed together like bath toys in marinas. Downed trees, powerlines and other debris were making navigating roadways treacherous for emergency responders
Around 4 million people were without power from Florida up the east coast to Virgina.
The hurricane hit the state’s Big Bend region just after 11pm local time on Thursday with 140mph winds and 10ft storm surge.
Governor Ron DeSantis confirmed two fatalities in Florida. A driver was killed when a sign fell onto their car in Tampa. Two others died in Wheeler County, Georgia, after their trailer crashed on a highway. Two people died when tree fells on houses Friday morning in Anderson, South Carolina. In North Carolina, a person was also killed by a falling tree in Charlotte.
One dead and more fatalities likely after Helene landfall
At least one person has died in Florida after the Category 4 storm made landfall causing severe flooding.
The identity of the person and the cause has not been shared but in a press conference governor Ron DeSantis said it happened at Interstate 4 near the Tampa area.
He urged people to not travel, saying the "roads can be hazardous" and it's "very, very dangerous".
"Stay put!"
Mr DeSantis warned that there are likely to be "additional" fatalities in the state as the storm moves through.
"When Floridians wake up tomorrow morning, we're going to be waking up to a state where very likely there's been additional loss of life," he says. "And certainly, there's going to be loss of property."
He notes emergency crews don't know the extent of the impact yet due to it being night time in Florida.
"We're not getting a full picture yet," he says.
Photos show Tampa’s Florida High Patrol close the Sunshine Skyway Bridge
The Florida Highway Patrol in Tampa said it was closing the Sunshine Skyway Bridge Thursday afternoon, as conditions in the area are continuing to devolve.
“As weather conditions continue to deteriorate & wind gusts have reached 60 MPH, FHP is closing the #Skyway,” the patrol wrote on X.
“Motorists are requested to seek alternate routes, do not drive through flooded roads & unless absolutely necessary stay off area roadways.”
Appalachians will see catastrophic flooding, landslides
The southern Appalachians are expected to see strong, damaging winds and rainfall of up to a foot, with some isolated amounts of 20 inches.
“This rainfall will likely result in catastrophic and potentially life-threatening flash and urban flooding, along with significant river flooding. Numerous significant landslides are expected in steep terrain across the southern Appalachians,” the National Hurricane Center warned.
The National Weather Service’s office in South Carolina’s Greenville-Spartanburg warned of “one of the most significant weather events to happen in the western portions of the area in the modern era.”
“Record flooding is forecasted and has been compared to the floods of 1916 in the Asheville area,” it said.
Read it: Category 4 Hurricane Helene roars ashore in Florida
Category 4 Hurricane Helene made landfall in Florida’s Big Bend region on Thursday night, bringing with it deadly winds of 140mph and a “catastrophic” storm surge.
Read more here.
One million people in Florida without power
Poweroutage.us is now reporting over a million people are without power.
Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri warns residents about playing ‘stupid games’ ahead of Helene
Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri warned residents in evacuation zones about playing “stupid games.”
Storm surge in the county could top between five and eight feet there.
“We’ve all heard the adage, play stupid games win stupid prizes. Somebody is going to win a stupid prize because they’re not going to get out and we’re not coming,” Gualtieri said.
People in evacuation zone A should get out now.
National Hurricane Center announces Helene makes landfall
DeSantis delivers remarks
“When Floridians wake up tomorrow morning, we’re going to be waking up to a state where there’s been additional loss of life and certainly theres going to be loss of property,” DeSantis said during the news conference. “You’re going to have people losing their homes because of this storm.”
DeSantis advised people against going out in the storm as it hits land. He told Floridians to expect additional power outages.
Residents could be prepared for wind damage and falling trees.
A look at Hurricane Helene from space
Videos capture Hurricane Helene from space. Satellites and the ISS are capturing jaw-dropping footage of this colossal force of nature, OrbitalToday.com wrote on X.
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