Satellite image of past hurricane.Photo:NOAA
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NOAA
Hurricane Helene has been upgraded to a Category 4 storm before making landfall in Florida late on Thursday, Sept. 26.Originally a tropical storm, Helene became a Category 4 hurricane on Thursday and is expected to bring “life-threatening storm surge, damaging winds and flooding rains” to a large portion of Florida and southeastern parts of the U.S., theNational Hurricane Centerannounced.The storm’s sustained winds have now grown stronger than 120 miles per hour, according toAccuWeather.The site says the storm is expected to make landfall between 10 p.m. and 11 p.m. Thursday night near the city of St. Marks, Fla., in the Panhandle on the state’s northwestern coast.“Devastating hurricane-force winds are expected across portions of northern Florida and southern Georgia where the core of Helene moves inland,” the NHC said in its alert. “Preparations to protect life and property should be completed.”Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.Additionally, Helene is forecasted to possibly contribute to life-threatening flash flooding and urban flooding across parts of northwestern and northern Florida, the Southeast, the southern Appalachians and the upper Tennessee Valley starting on Sept. 26 through Friday, Sept. 27, the advisory continued.“Helene stands toe-to-toe with any of the threats that Florida has faced over the past 10 years or indeed really over hurricane history,” Ryan Truchelut, a hurricane forecaster for theUSA TodayNetwork-Florida, told the newspaper.Ahead of the impending storm in his state, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis issueda state of emergency for 41 countieson Monday, Sept. 24.“There have been local communities and counties that have issued evacuation orders in a number of Florida counties, you still have time to be able to do that and so I would heed those warnings,” the governor said, perNBC affiliate WFLA. “You can hide from the wind, and there will be significant wind on this storm, but you have to run from the water.”DeSantissaid in a Sept. 24 X post (formerly known as Twitter)that the state has almost 18,000 linemen staged along with available search and rescue and roadway clearing crews.President Joe Biden earlier declareda state of emergency for Floridaon Sept. 24, ordering “Federal assistance to supplement State, tribal, and local response efforts due to the emergency conditions resulting from Tropical Storm Helene beginning on September 23, 2024, and continuing.”
Hurricane Helene has been upgraded to a Category 4 storm before making landfall in Florida late on Thursday, Sept. 26.
Originally a tropical storm, Helene became a Category 4 hurricane on Thursday and is expected to bring “life-threatening storm surge, damaging winds and flooding rains” to a large portion of Florida and southeastern parts of the U.S., theNational Hurricane Centerannounced.
The storm’s sustained winds have now grown stronger than 120 miles per hour, according toAccuWeather.
The site says the storm is expected to make landfall between 10 p.m. and 11 p.m. Thursday night near the city of St. Marks, Fla., in the Panhandle on the state’s northwestern coast.
“Devastating hurricane-force winds are expected across portions of northern Florida and southern Georgia where the core of Helene moves inland,” the NHC said in its alert. “Preparations to protect life and property should be completed.”
Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
Additionally, Helene is forecasted to possibly contribute to life-threatening flash flooding and urban flooding across parts of northwestern and northern Florida, the Southeast, the southern Appalachians and the upper Tennessee Valley starting on Sept. 26 through Friday, Sept. 27, the advisory continued.
“Helene stands toe-to-toe with any of the threats that Florida has faced over the past 10 years or indeed really over hurricane history,” Ryan Truchelut, a hurricane forecaster for theUSA TodayNetwork-Florida, told the newspaper.
Ahead of the impending storm in his state, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis issueda state of emergency for 41 countieson Monday, Sept. 24.
“There have been local communities and counties that have issued evacuation orders in a number of Florida counties, you still have time to be able to do that and so I would heed those warnings,” the governor said, perNBC affiliate WFLA. “You can hide from the wind, and there will be significant wind on this storm, but you have to run from the water.”
DeSantissaid in a Sept. 24 X post (formerly known as Twitter)that the state has almost 18,000 linemen staged along with available search and rescue and roadway clearing crews.
President Joe Biden earlier declareda state of emergency for Floridaon Sept. 24, ordering “Federal assistance to supplement State, tribal, and local response efforts due to the emergency conditions resulting from Tropical Storm Helene beginning on September 23, 2024, and continuing.”
source: people.com