Hurricane Helene ravaged much of the Southeast last week, carving a path of destruction from Florida to Appalachian states as it spawned deadly flooding, mudslides and tornadoes.
After making landfall on Thursday on Florida’s Gulf Coast, the storm, with its powerful winds and record-breaking storm surges, killed at least 60 people, destroyed countless homes, put over four million customers in the dark and blocked hundreds of roads.
Here’s how Helene has wreaked havoc across the Southeast.
After roaring ashore into Florida, Helene set several records.
Helene barreled into Florida’s Big Bend region as a Category 4 hurricane on Thursday, packing 140-mile-per-hour winds. Fueled by very warm ocean temperatures, the storm was the strongest ever to strike the Big Bend region, a marshy and sparsely populated area.
Helene, which was the third hurricane to hit the Big Bend in 13 months, broke storm surge records across the Gulf Coast, many of which were last set just over a year ago, when Hurricane Idalia drenched the same area.
Gov. Ron DeSantis spoke about the “complete obliteration of homes” in parts of the state at a news conference on Saturday. Cedar Key, a small community on a collection of tiny islands jutting into the Gulf of Mexico, was “completely gone,” said Michael Bobbitt, who lives there. In Keaton Beach, another small shoreline community, the sheriff told a local TV station that 90 percent of the homes were washed away.
A record-high storm surge inundated the Tampa Bay region, including in areas that had rarely, or never, seen flooding. After facing several hurricanes in recent years, some residents in the region were left wondering whether it’s worth living there.
Western North Carolina was facing a historic disaster after the storm.
After ripping through Florida and Georgia, Helene brought pounding rains and dangerous landslides to western North Carolina, paralyzing the region. “It’s like a mini-apocalypse,” Gretchen Hogan, a resident of Brevard, N.C., said of the situation there.
Across several counties, towns were cut off from the rest of the state. Cellphone service and power were down in many areas, complicating officials’ efforts to reach people calling 911. Debris, downed trees and flooding led to more than 400 road closures, and gas stations were running out of fuel. Officials said to consider all roads in western North Carolina closed, with only emergency rescue vehicles allowed to travel.
These challenges have made rescuing residents and assessing damage a nearly impossible task.
People in the region were scrambling to find cellular service, congregating in public places like libraries to try to reach their family and friends. Officials in Buncombe County, N.C., which includes Asheville, have asked for portable cell towers.
The storm also razed communities beyond Florida and North Carolina.
Helene overwhelmed towns hundreds of miles away from Florida with pounding rain, muddy water and tornadoes, knocking out power as far north as Cincinnati. Many creeks and rivers breached their banks, and water overtopped some dams.
A dam in eastern Tennessee, the Nolichucky Dam, was also on the verge of failing on Saturday, before water started to recede. Elsewhere in the state, helicopters were called in on Friday to rescue dozens of people who were surrounded by floodwaters and stranded on a hospital roof.
In Atlanta, even with the storm largely sparing the city, several neighborhoods have endured flooding, and about 100,000 households in the area had their power knocked out on Friday. Across Georgia, there were at least 15 storm-related deaths, according to Gov. Brian Kemp.
In a sense of how widespread the damages were, the White House approved emergency requests for federal help from Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Alabama before Helene made landfall.
On Saturday, President Biden said he had directed the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s administrator, Deanne Criswell, to travel across the region to assess damage. More than 1,270 rescuers have been deployed, FEMA said.
The death toll is likely to rise, officials say.
As of Sunday morning, at least 60 people were confirmed dead across five states: Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia. Causes of death ranged from rising floodwaters, falling trees, car crashes and a tornado produced by the storm. Many details on the victims were still unknown.
The highest toll out of one state was 23, in South Carolina. The fatalities included two volunteer firefighters who were responding to calls and killed after a tree fell on their fire truck, an official said.
In Florida, Governor DeSantis said that 11 people were confirmed dead. And in North Carolina, Gov. Roy Cooper said there were at least 10 storm-related deaths, adding that officials have had trouble reaching relatives of the victims because of communications problems in the state.
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