Helene’s Florida toll grows: Widespread power outages, 7 dead, hundreds of homes flooded
At least seven Floridians dead. Nearly 800,000 people without power. Record coastal flooding from Tampa to the Big Bend. Hundreds of millions of dollars in property losses and damages, at the very least.
Hurricane Helene, which roared ashore just after 11 p.m. Thursday night as a Category 4 hurricane, hammered Florida’s Gulf Coast and was far from done with its destruction.
The massive system, downgraded to a tropical depression Friday afternoon, was lashing Georgia and dumping torrential rains flooding communities across the Southeast. Rivers were over-topping banks around Asheville, North Carolina, and the rain was expected to keep falling throughout the day.
Florida’s death toll hit seven on Friday with the Tampa Bay Times reporting that five people had died in Pinellas County, in addition to two deaths reported elsewhere earlier. At least eleven others were killed in Georgia and the toll across the Southeast was expected to grow.
It will take days to fully assess damage but news and social media reports recorded hundreds of miles of inundated streets and thousands of flooded homes and condos along much of the Gulf Coast— from Fort Myers Beach to Sarasota and points north. Taylor County, where Helene made landfall in a sparsely populated stretch of the Big Bend, endured its third named storm in just over a year.
“The early reports we’ve received is the damage in those counties in the eye of the storm has exceeded the damage of Idalia and Debby combined,” Gov. Ron DeSantis said in a Friday morning press conference. “This is some major damage.”
The governor said “thousands” of people were saved by state and local search and rescue teams.
“All the calls that any state officials responded to last night, we were able to find the person, or people, or pets, and bring them to safety,” he said.
That’s in contrast to Hurricane Ian, DeSantis said, when crews struggled to reach people who had not left their homes. That storm killed 150 people in Florida.
Friday morning, Florida’s number of power outages appeared to peak at just over 1.1 million customers with the lights off. It had dropped to just under 800,000 by 4 p.m. DeSantis told residents an army of more than 30,000 lineworkers was set to start repairing the grid now that Helene has passed. Dozens of nursing homes and assisted living facilities, as well as four hospitals, were on generator power as of Friday morning.
“There’s folks on the ground taking action to remedy that as soon as possible,” he said.
Surveying the damage
A slight jog east may have spared Tallahassee, the state’s capital, from the most severe impacts of Helene, keeping the state capital on Helene’s weaker side. Early footage shows some fallen trees blocking roads and shearing off sections of homes but not widespread destruction.
Storm surge levels broke records up and down the coast, from landfall south to the Tampa Bay area. In Cedar Key, NOAA gauges recorded more than 9 feet of water above sea level. In Clearwater Beach, St. Petersburg and inside Tampa Bay, nearly 7 feet.
Further South in Fort Myers, 5 feet of surge was recorded. Naples notched 4 feet. Those levels were high, but don’t come close to the catastrophic levels seen during Hurricane Ian in 2022.
The water overwhelmed cities and led to residents calling for help and rescue along the coast. The city of Venice, in Sarasota County, said it conducted at least 30 rescues on Thursday before the water receded. Pasco County said it rescued at least 200 people overnight. Pinellas County had 1,500 calls for rescue it was not able to respond to, Sheriff Bob Gualtieri told Axios.
In Manatee County, officials told the Bradenton Herald they got nearly 2,000 calls for help overnight as the storm rolled in. More than half of those calls came from residents and tourists on Anna Maria Island, according to Manatee County Commissioner Kevin Van Ostenbridge.
Helene’s waves smashed houses and burst windows, tossed boats onto streets and unmoored buildings from their foundations. In Clearwater, it left drifts of up to six feet of sand on beachfront roads.
In St. Petersburg and Bradenton, officials called for residents to conserve water — or even stop flushing the toilet or using the shower altogether — to avoid straining sewage systems overwhelmed with stormwater flooding.
Aerial assessments of places like Tampa showed entire neighborhoods on barrier islands with submerged roads.
“We’re seeing extensive damage on Davis Islands and waterfront areas. The National Guard has activated to help with rescue efforts,” Tampa Mayor Jane Castor posted on X.
Airports, universities and government buildings across the state were closed ahead of the storm. Large coastal bridges like the Skyway in Tampa closed as winds picked up, and a fleet of bridge inspectors were on their way to examine them for a safe re-opening Friday morning, the Florida Department of Transportation said. Some started to re-open around noon Friday.
Friday afternoon, the tropical storm had finally slowed its frantic pace and was lingering as a tropical depression on the border of Tennessee and Kentucky. Its winds had fallen to 35 mph but the storm was also causing widespread flooding across much of the Southeast. Another million-plus people were reported without power in Georgia and other states.
Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times Staff Writer Lawrence Mower contributed to this report.