FLORIDA – Hurricane Milton has caused widespread destruction in the US state of Florida, leaving multiple fatalities, destroying homes, and plunging more than two million residents into darkness as power outages swept across the region. The hurricane, which made landfall as a Category 3 storm with wind speeds reaching 193 km/h, is being described as one of the most dangerous storms the area has faced in recent years.
St. Lucie County Sheriff Keith Pearson confirmed that several people lost their lives in the storm. “We are not going to get into how many, but I can tell you it’s more than one person who has lost their life that we already recovered,” Pearson told CNN. He added that hundreds of homes across the county were “completely totaled” by tornadoes generated by the hurricane.
The US National Hurricane Center (NHC) reported that Hurricane Milton brought severe winds, torrential rain, and dangerously high tides, leading to widespread flooding and storm surges across Florida’s coastal areas. Water levels in some parts of the state rose rapidly, inundating entire communities and prompting authorities to issue urgent evacuation orders.
Millions of Florida residents were advised to evacuate, with reports of traffic jams and fuel shortages complicating the situation. Emergency services were on high alert as the storm moved inland from Florida’s Gulf Coast, continuing to wreak havoc as it tracked toward the Atlantic Ocean. The NHC warned that significant damage was expected to occur offshore as well.
This disaster comes just two weeks after Hurricane Helene devastated Florida and other southeastern states, leaving behind a trail of destruction and casualties. With Milton now adding to the destruction, emergency services are stretched as they work to rescue residents trapped by floodwaters and assess the full scale of the damage.
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has declared a state of emergency, and federal assistance is being coordinated to help those affected by the hurricane. Rescue and recovery efforts are underway, with local authorities warning that the rebuilding process will be long and difficult given the magnitude of the destruction.
As Florida grapples with the aftermath of yet another powerful storm, the state’s residents are left to pick up the pieces of their lives, with many homes completely destroyed and communities facing the daunting task of recovery.
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