Hurricane Helene accelerates toward Florida’s Big Bend threatening ‘unsurvivable’ storm surge: Live
Hurricane Helene could bring ‘unprecedented damage’ to Florida with sustained winds up to 135mph and 20ft storm surge
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Florida is bracing for “unsurvivable” storm surge from Hurricane Helene, a Category 4 storm.
In the afternoon, Helene was accelerating toward Florida’s Big Bend, bringing tropical storm conditions across most of the state’s western coast. Florida, Alabama, and parts of the Carolinas are at risk of flooding.
Just over a month after Storm Debby hurtled into the Sunshine State, Hurricane Helene now threatens to become the strongest storm to hit the US in over a year.
Hurricane Helene has maximum sustained winds of 140mph as of Thursday night. Florida officials are warning residents to brace for life-threatening rain and storm surge. All parts of Florida are under a hurricane or tropical storm warning.
Its size is also massive compared to previous hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico. Local forecasters estimate the storm stretches 822 miles in width, and 114 in length. Hurricane warnings extend roughly 90 miles above the Georgia-Florida line.
According to The Associated Press, Helene is forecast to be one of the largest storms in breadth to hit the region in years, with only three bigger since 1988.
Helene to hit Florida two years after devastating Hurricane Ian
Hurricane Helene, which is expected to strengthen to Category 4, will batter Florida two years after Hurricane Ian.
Hurricane Ian made landfall near Cayo Costa, Florida, in September 2022. Meanwhile, Helene is set to make landfall slightly north, near Florida’s Big Bend region.
Hurricane Ian is the costliest to ever hit Florida and the third-costliest in US history.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency has provided $1.15 billion for 387,139 households to assist with home repairs, lodging expenses, rent payments and other needs.
The agency also allocated $2.3 billion to reimburse state, local and tribal governments and nonprofit organizations for storm-related costs.
Hurricane Helene is set to cause ‘unprecedented’ damage to parts of the state.
“We will have countless downed trees. We will have structural damage. We will have loss of power,” Tallahassee Mayor John Dailey said on Wednesday. “Yes, if our community remains central in Helene’s path as forecasted, we will see unprecedented damage like nothing we have ever experienced before.”
Mapped: Hurricane Helene rainfall
ICYMI: Hurricane Helene could render parts of Tallahassee ‘uninhabitable’ for months
“Catastrophic” storm surge and flooding could render some areas of Tallahassee and the surrounding region “uninhabitable” for weeks or months, the National Weather Service said.
Tallahassee Mayor John Dailey told residents that Hurricane Helene could bring “unprecedented damage” to the Florida city if it remains on its current path.
“We will have countless downed trees. We will have structural damage. We will have loss of power,” Dailey said on Wednesday. “Yes, if our community remains central in Helene’s path as forecasted, we will see unprecedented damage like nothing we have ever experienced before.”
The storm could strengthen to a Category 4 as it makes landfall in Florida late Thursday.
Key messages from officials ahead of Hurricane Helene
Video: Helene batters Cancún on path to Florida
ICYMI: NASA and SpaceX Florida rocket launch delayed by days due to Helene
‘Life-threatening’ storm surge to come, Florida officials warn
“Life-threatening” storm surge of up to 20 feet could hit Florida as Hurricane Helene makes landfall tomorrow, officials warn.
Residents should stay alert and monitor their emergency alerts tomorrow.
Pet shelter issues call for community help ahead of Helene
An animal shelter in Marianna, Florida has issued a call for community members to help foster animals as Hurricane Helene batters the state.
The Partners for Pets shelter needs to find temporary homes for their animals before Helene hits the state in full force on Thursday, local outlet WTVY reports.
Meanwhile, Wags and Whiskers of the Wiregrass, an animal boarding center in Enterprise and Dothan, has offered to take residents’ pets and give them safe shelter as the storm passes.
See it: Hurricane Helene is rapidly strengthening, radar imagery shows
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