Hurricane Helene kills at least 44 and cuts a swath of destruction across the Southeast
UNB
Publish: 28 Sep 2024, 02:27 PM
PERRY,
Fla. Sept 28 (AP/UNB) - Hurricane Helene left an enormous path of destruction
across Florida and the southeastern U.S. on Friday, killing at least 44 people,
snapping towering oaks like twigs and tearing apart homes as rescue crews
launched desperate missions to save people from floodwaters.
Among those killed were
three firefighters, a woman and her 1-month-old twins, and an 89-year-old woman
whose house was struck by a falling tree. According to an Associated Press
tally, the deaths occurred in Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina
and Virginia.
The Category 4 hurricane
knocked out power to some hospitals in southern Georgia, and Gov. Brian Kemp
said authorities had to use chainsaws to clear debris and open up roads. The
storm had maximum sustained winds of 140 mph (225 kph) when it made landfall
late Thursday in a sparsely populated region in Florida's rural Big Bend area,
home to fishing villages and vacation hideaways where the state's panhandle and
peninsula meet.
Moody's Analytics said
it expects $15 billion to $26 billion in property damage.
The wreckage extended
hundreds of miles northward to northeast Tennessee, where a " dangerous
rescue situation " by helicopter unfolded after 54 people were moved to the
roof of the Unicoi County Hospital as water rapidly flooded the facility.
Everyone was rescued and no one was left at the hospital as of late Friday
afternoon, Ballad Health said.
In North Carolina, a
lake featured in the movie "Dirty Dancing" overtopped a dam and
surrounding neighborhoods were evacuated, although there were no immediate
concerns it would fail. People also were evacuated from Newport, Tennessee, a
city of about 7,000 people, amid concerns about a dam near there, although
officials later said the structure had not failed.
Tornadoes hit some
areas, including one in Nash County, North Carolina, that critically injured
four people.
Atlanta received a
record 11.12 inches (28.24 centimeters) of rain in 48 hours, the most the city
has seen in a two-day period since record keeping began in 1878, Georgia's
Office of the State Climatologist said on the social platform X. The previous
mark of 9.59 inches (24.36 cm) was set in 1886. Some neighborhoods were so
badly flooded that only car roofs could be seen poking above the water.
Climate change has
exacerbated conditions that allow such storms to thrive, rapidly intensifying
in warming waters and turning into powerful cyclones sometimes in a matter of
hours.
When Laurie Lilliott
pulled onto her street in Dekle Beach, Florida, after Helene plowed through,
she couldn't see the roofline of her home beyond the palm trees. It had
collapsed, torn apart by the pounding storm surge, one corner still
precariously propped up by a piling.
"It took me a long
time to breathe," Lilliott said.
As she surveyed the
damage, her name and phone number were still inked on her arm in permanent
marker, an admonition by Taylor County officials to help identify recovered
bodies in the storm's aftermath. The community has taken direct hits from three
hurricanes since August 2023.
All five who died in one
Florida county were in neighborhoods where residents were told to evacuate,
said Bob Gualtieri, the sheriff in Pinellas County in the St. Petersburg area.
Some who stayed ended up having to hide in their attics to escape the rising
water. He said the death toll could rise as crews go door-to-door in flooded
areas.
More deaths were
reported in Georgia and the Carolinas, including two South Carolina
firefighters and a Georgia firefighter who died when trees struck their trucks.
Video on social media
showed sheets of rain and siding coming off buildings in Perry, Florida, near
where the storm hit land. A news station showed a home that was overturned, and
many communities established curfews.
Also in Perry, the
hurricane peeled off the new roof of a church that was replaced after Hurricane
Idalia last year.
When the water hit
knee-level in Kera O'Neil's home in Hudson, Florida, she knew it was time to
escape.
"There's a moment
where you are thinking, 'If this water rises above the level of the stove, we
are not going to have not much room to breathe,'" she said, recalling how
she and her sister waded through chest-deep water with one cat in a plastic
carrier and another in a cardboard box.
President Joe Biden said
he was praying for survivors, and the head of the Federal Emergency Management
Agency headed to the area. The agency deployed more than 1,500 workers, and
they helped with 400 rescues by late morning.
In Tampa, some areas
could be reached only by boat.
Officials urged people
who were trapped to call for rescuers and not tread floodwaters, warning they
can be dangerous due to live wires, sewage, sharp objects and other debris.
More than 3 million
homes and businesses were without power in Florida, Georgia and the Carolinas
as of late Friday, according to poweroutage.us. The site also showed outages as
far north as Ohio and Indiana due to Helene's rapid northward movement
throughout the day.
In Georgia, an
electrical utility group warned of "catastrophic" damage to utility
infrastructure, with more than 100 high voltage transmission lines damaged. And
officials in South Carolina, where more than 40% of customers were without
power, said crews had to cut their way through debris just to determine what
was still standing in some places.
The hurricane came
ashore near the mouth of the Aucilla River, about 20 miles (30 kilometers)
northwest of where Idalia hit last year at nearly the same ferocity. Florida
Gov. Ron DeSantis said the damage from Helene appears to be greater than the
combined effects of Idalia and Hurricane Debby in August.
"It's tough, and we
understand that. We also understand that this is a resilient state,"
DeSantis said at a news conference in storm-damaged St. Pete Beach.
Soon after it crossed
over land, Helene weakened to a tropical storm and later a post-tropical
cyclone. Forecasters said it continued to produce catastrophic flooding, and
some areas received more than a foot of rain.
A mudslide in the
Appalachian Mountains washed out part of an interstate highway at the North
Carolina-Tennessee state line.
Another slide hit homes
in North Carolina and occupants had to wait more than four hours to be rescued,
said Ryan Cole, the emergency services assistant director in Buncombe County.
His 911 center received more than 3,300 calls in eight hours Friday.
"This is something
that we're going to be dealing with for many days and weeks to come," Cole
said.
Forecasters warned of
flooding in North Carolina that could be worse than anything seen in the past
century. Evacuations were underway and around 300 roads were closed statewide.
The Connecticut Army National Guard sent a helicopter to help.
School districts and
universities canceled classes. Florida airports that closed due to the storm
reopened Friday. Inspectors were examining bridges and causeways along the Gulf
Coast, the state's transportation secretary said.
Helene also swamped
parts of Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula, flooding streets and toppling trees as it
brushed past the resort city of Cancun this week. It also knocked out power to
more than 200,000 homes and businesses in western Cuba.
Helene was the eighth
named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season, which began June 1. The National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has predicted an above-average season
this year because of record-warm ocean temperatures.
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