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Hurricane Helene is becoming a Category 4 storm heading toward Big Bend, Florida, bringing potentially deadly storm surges
Washington

Hurricane Helene is becoming a Category 4 storm heading toward Big Bend, Florida, bringing potentially deadly storm surges

Hurricane Helene has become a dangerous place Category 4 on Thursday as it grew stronger in the Gulf of Mexico on a path for Florida’s Big Bend area, according to the National Hurricane Center in Miami. Helene is expected to crash ashore Thursday evening with a “catastrophic and deadly” storm surge that could be up to 20 feet high in some areas, as well as strong, damaging winds, the hurricane center said.

Hurricane Center Director Michael Brennan described the expected storm surge along Florida’s northwest coast as “a truly unsurvivable scenario.”

“This can destroy homes, move cars and the water level will rise very quickly as Helene approaches this evening, cutting off escape routes,” Brennan said.

Helene had already strengthened into a Category 2 storm on Thursday morning and was blowing with maximum sustained winds of 125 miles per hour on Thursday afternoon, making it a Category 3 hurricane, which forecasters classify as a major hurricane. On Thursday evening, Helene’s maximum sustained winds increased to 140 miles per hour, becoming what the hurricane center called an “extremely dangerous Category 4 hurricane.”

According to utility PowerOutage.us, more than 788,000 customers in Florida were already without power as of Thursday evening.

As of 9 p.m. Eastern Time, Helene was located about 65 miles southwest of Cedar Key, Florida, and 90 miles south of Tallahassee. The hurricane center said it would make landfall in the Big Bend area late Thursday evening.

Live radar map of Hurricane Helene

CBS Miami’s live radar map shows the current location and rainfall impacts of Hurricane Helene.

CBS Miami

The hurricane center said that “sustained tropical storm-force winds” and hurricane-force gusts were already being felt along Florida’s west coast before landfall on Thursday evening.

Late Thursday evening, Helene produced “catastrophic winds that will spread onshore in the Big Bend region of Florida over the next few hours,” the hurricane center said. The center warned people to go outside in such dangerous conditions and to be careful when the wind dies down as this could mean the eye has landed on land, leading to a brief respite from the dangerous conditions, before they return on the other side The storm wall moves in.

After making landfall, which is expected Thursday evening, the storm is expected to move inland over Georgia. Severe flooding is possible in the Southeast, with half a foot of rain forecast in Atlanta and 10 to 20 inches forecast in a narrow strip of the southern Appalachians. In Atlanta, winds are expected to reach tropical storm strength around 4 a.m. EDT and ease after 9 a.m

Helene’s outer bands began destroying the entire west coast of Florida on Thursday morning. In the Big Bend region south of Tallahassee, Gulf waters spilled over barriers and flooded roads. There are already record increases in St. Petersburg. Conditions are expected to improve in Tampa, now on the back side of the storm.

Gov. Ron DeSantis warned residents to move to higher ground as quickly as possible. “Every minute that passes brings us closer to conditions that are simply too dangerous to navigate,” DeSantis said.

At the White House, the head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency urged people to take the threat of storm surges seriously. FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell said most of the 150 people were killed Hurricane Ian in 2022 died by drowning.

“Remember that you may only need to travel 10 or 15 miles inland to escape the threat of the storm surge itself, as water is the primary reason people lose their lives in these storms, so please do not underestimate.” what impact that could have,” Criswell said.


FEMA update on Hurricane Helene

10:38

Several Airports closed Airlines canceled hundreds of flights because of the storm.

The giant storm’s hurricane-force winds extended outward up to 60 miles from its center, and tropical-storm-force winds extended outward up to 345 miles, the hurricane center said.

CBS News senior weather and climate producer David Parkinson called Helene a “gigantic” storm and noted that Helene “will have a wind field so large that there will be a point (Thursday afternoon) where in 60 of Florida’s 67 counties will all experience “tropical storm force” wind gusts of 39 mph, excluding the western panhandle.

On Thursday evening, the eye appeared to be wobbling east of the track set by the National Hurricane Center. “This is good news for Crawfordville and Tallahassee in particular, as the western eyewall is much weaker than the eastern, and if it wobbles far enough east, Tallahassee will avoid triple-digit winds,” Parkinson reported. “Perry, on the other hand, could be the city facing the worst winds from a landfalling tropical system for the third time in 13 months.”

NASA released video of the hurricane as seen from the International Space Station, showing the size of the storm as it raged across the Gulf of Mexico on Thursday afternoon.

A Category 3 storm could cause significant damage or tearing of roofing to well-built frame homes in the hardest-hit coastal communities, the hurricane center said. Many trees are snapped or uprooted and block the roads. Electricity and water will likely be unavailable for several days to even weeks after the storm. In a Category 4, homes can suffer severe damage, including loss of roofs and/or exterior walls, snapped or uprooted trees, and downed utility poles.

DeSantis said Wednesday that thousands of line workers were coming to the state to restore power after the storm passes.

In Florida’s Big Bend area, from Carrabelle to the Suwannee River, forecasters expected water to reach 15 to 20 feet above ground level Storm surgeThe peak occurred at the same time as the flood. Other areas could see water depths of 3 to 15 feet, the hurricane center warned. 15 to 20 feet of water would be enough to cover a two-story home, Parkinson pointed out.

“The water impact will likely be the most impactful and deadly part of the storm,” Jamie Rhome, deputy director of the hurricane center, told CBS News.

Hurricane Helene
A satellite image of Hurricane Helene in the Gulf of Mexico at 6:30 p.m. EDT on September 26, 2024.

NOAA


President Biden and DeSantis declared a state of emergency in the state earlier this week Evacuation orders were issued in several counties. At the University of Tampa, officials attempted to evacuate all residential students by Wednesday afternoon.

DeSantis advised Florida residents against traveling hundreds of miles from their homes to escape the storm because Helene was expected to move inland after landfall. Instead, he urged people to move to higher ground in their own area by going to a friend or family member’s house or to an emergency shelter.

A state of emergency has also been declared in Georgia, North and South Carolina, and as far north as Virginia.

Prepare for Hurricane Helene

Along the west coast of Florida, residents prepared for the storm by boarding up windows, refueling their vehicles and filling sandbags before Helene strikes, potentially dangerously.

In Tallahassee, Dorothy Richardson prepared to settle down with six of her grandchildren.

“Whatever the outcome, I have to prepare,” Richardson said. “I got my sandbags… got my coal, got my lighter fluid, got my propane tank.”

People fill sandbags at the Joe DiMaggio Sports Complex before Helene makes landfall at Florida's Big Bend in Clearwater, Florida, on September 25, 2024.
People fill sandbags at the Joe DiMaggio Sports Complex before Helene makes landfall at Florida’s Big Bend in Clearwater, Florida, on September 25, 2024.

Reuters/Marco Bello


Russell King prepared to evacuate his home in Mexico Beach. He said the house barely survived Hurricane Michael in 2018.

“We lost our shower, we lost our elevator, we lost all of our downstairs walls,” King said. “We think we’re OK with it now, but we don’t know – at 125 miles an hour they break.”

Tallahassee Mayor John Dailey said the city is doubling its workforce, with crews coming in from other states to help restore power and provide relief supplies to the region after the Helene accident.

“It’s very concerning,” Dailey said. “I’m from Tallahassee, which is my hometown. We have never seen a storm of this magnitude that could potentially directly impact Tallahassee.”

Further south, in Tampa, a temporary wall was erected in front of Tampa General Hospital to prevent water from entering the nearby bay. The area was expected to experience a storm surge of 5 to 8 feet. Officials said the wall held back about 2 1/2 feet of water last year Hurricane Idalia Blow.

Warm water in the Gulf fuels hurricanes

Record-warm water in the Gulf would act as fuel, strengthening the storm. Brian McNoldy, a senior research fellow at the University of Miami’s Rosenstiel School of Marine, Atmospheric, and Earth Science, recently noted this Heat content of the oceans in the Gulf of Mexico is the highest on record. Warm water is a necessary component for strengthening tropical systems.

Sea surface temperatures along Helene’s path are as high as 89 degrees Fahrenheit – 2 to 4 degrees Fahrenheit above normal. According to Climate Central, these record water temperatures were made significantly more likely by human-caused climate change. The entire North Atlantic experienced record temperatures in 2024, trapping 90% of excess heat Climate change produced by Greenhouse gas pollution.

Manuel Bojorquez, Aimee Picchi and Dave Malkoff contributed to this report.

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