October 11 Hurricane Milton news | CNN

October 11 Hurricane Milton news

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'Surreal': CNN goes inside flooded home where the water level is still rising
04:48 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

• Deaths and damage from Milton: Floridians are picking up the pieces after Milton cut through the state, battering it with deadly tornadoeshistoric rain and high winds — and the storm was supercharged by climate change, according to a scientific analysis. At least 17 people have died.

Ongoing flooding: Milton’s deluge has caused numerous rivers to swellRescues are still underway, with officials warning that floodwaters in some areas have not receded yet, as the water slowly drains into the Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic Ocean.

• Power outages and gas shortages:  Electricity is being restored, but more than 1 million customers in Florida remain in the dark. Meanwhile, more than 75% of gas stations in the Tampa Bay area have no fuel, but officials are working to distribute supplies quickly.

• Affected by Milton? Bookmark CNN’s lite site for fast connectivity. Here’s how to help victims of the storm and what to do if your home was impacted. Sigue nuestra cobertura del huracán en español.

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Our live coverage of Hurricane Milton has ended for the day. Follow the latest news or read through the posts below.

Biden spoke with Georgia and Florida officials Friday about hurricane recovery efforts, White House says

President Joe Biden gives an update on the government's response to Hurricanes Milton and Helene in the Roosevelt Room of the White House on October 11, 2024.

President Joe Biden spoke with Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp and South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster Friday “to discuss the recovery and rebuilding efforts following Hurricane Helene,” the White House said in a statement.

The statement noted that Biden also spoke with Bradenton, Florida, Mayor Gene Brown regarding Hurricane Milton response.

Earlier Friday, Biden spoke forcefully against a spate of mis- and dis-information regarding federal storm response, pointing to the Republican officials with whom he has been in close touch.

“Conservative, hardcore” Republicans in impacted areas, he said, “are standing up and saying, ‘It’s got to stop.’”

FDA announces shortage of 3 drugs as North Carolina facility recovers from Hurricane Helene impacts

The Food and Drug Administration announced a shortage of three more drugs after one of the largest manufacturers of IV solutions in the United States was “significantly impacted” by Hurricane Helene.

The FDA said that Dextrose 70% IV solution, Lactated Ringers IV Solution and Peritoneal Dialysis Solution are not “commercially available in adequate supply to meet national demand” and issued guidelines for compounding at pharmacies “to help fill the gaps.”

The impacted facility located in Marion, North Carolina, a little under an hour east of Asheville, is one of the largest manufacturers of IV fluids and dialysis solutions in the country. The shortage has led some hospitals across the US to ration their supplies and even postpone some surgeries.

1.9 million customers are still without power in Florida

About 1.9 million customers are without power in Florida after Milton ripped through the state, according to PowerOutage.us.

Some of the highest number of outages can be found in counties along the coast where Milton made landfall, including Pinellas, Hillsborough, Manatee and Sarasota counties.

Officials to release more water from reservoir into already flooded river, angering residents whose homes are threatened

Officials are releasing more water from the Medard Reservoir into a nearby river in Valrico, which is already flooded from Milton, to prevent the dam from breaking. The decision is outraging residents in the area, who were urged to leave as the rising floodwaters threatened their homes.

The Southwest Florida Water Management District, a flood protection agency, said they have to release more water from the reservoir into the Alafia River to protect the “structural integrity of the dam,” which would further endanger residents if it breaks, according to a news release.

“While the District recognizes that homes along the Alafia River may already be experiencing flooding issues, not pumping the additional water from the reservoir and risking a failure, would further endanger residents and property downstream,” the release said.

The additional water that will be put into the river is “less than 1% of the overall flow in the Alafia River,” the water authority said.

The Alafia River is located at the community of Lithia, about 13 miles southeast of Valrico, which is about 20 miles east of Tampa. The Medard Reservoir received nearly 7 inches of rainfall and rose 6.5 feet as a result of Milton, the release said.

The river was about 6 feet deep late Friday morning and is expected to crest at about 25.5 feet on Friday night, according to CNN meteorologists. Hillsborough County Sheriff Chad Chronister told residents who live near creeks and rivers to leave Friday morning, warning river flooding was expected to only worsen as the day progressed.

John Taylor, who has lived in Valrico for four years, told CNN’s Isabel Rosales he is frustrated because he believes officials should have released water from the reservoir before Milton’s rain caused the river to flood.

“The water rolls too fast on us. It rolls about 10 feet in under 24 hours after the storm and this seems to consistently happen to us in these areas right here where they’re releasing these reservoirs,” Taylor said. “It’s dangerous for us that are waiting for a typical storm that we can generally survive and then the water rises over 10 feet in a day.”

CNN has reached out to the Water Management District for comment.

Deadly tornado that hit St. Lucie County rated at least EF3

An aerial view shows destruction at the Spanish Lakes subdivision in Fort Pierce, Florida, on Thursday.

A storm survey in St. Lucie County has confirmed EF3 tornado damage, according to the National Weather Service. The area surveyed included the Spanish Lakes subdivision. At least five people were killed by a tornado there, St. Lucie County Sheriff Keith Pearson said Thursday.

“EF3 damage, indicative of winds of up to 140-150 mph, was noted where several large warehouses were severely damaged and destroyed near the intersection of Orange Avenue and S. Rock Road,” the weather service said. “In the Spanish Lakes subdivision, numerous manufactured homes were destroyed when they were flipped or tossed. This is indicative of high end EF2 damage of 125-135 mph.”

These results still are preliminary and damage surveys will continue into the weekend.

The estimated track so far is at least 12 miles, but the weather service believes it extends farther on both ends of their initial survey. Additional work through the weekend will be needed to determine the entire length.

This is the second EF3 tornado confirmed in Florida from Hurricane Milton.

Milton's death toll rises to at least 17 people

The death toll from Milton has risen to at least 17, according to CNN’s tally, after a death was announced in Polk County, Florida.

Marco Grillo, 83, of Lakeland was found “floating beneath the surface of the floodwater behind the couple’s residence” Friday after he wandered away the night before, the Polk County Sheriff’s Office said in a news release. He had suffered from late-stage Alzheimer’s disease, a heart condition and bad circulation, they said.

“Despite Mr. Grillo being found in his backyard, the area was so flooded that our aviation unit had to direct deputies on an airboat to him. Our prayers are with his family,” Sheriff Grady Judd said in the release.

Death toll, by county:

  • St. Lucie County: 6
  • Pinellas County: 2
  • Volusia County: 4
  • Citrus County: 1
  • Hillsborough County: 1
  • Polk County: 2
  • Orange County: 1

Watch: An apartment complex was inundated by flooding in Pasco County

A drone showed aerial views of widespread flooding from the Anclote River in Pasco County, Florida, on Friday. People had to evacuate an apartment complex, and several trees, buildings and cars were partially submerged from the flooding.

The Anclote River, which is north of Clearwater, and the St. Johns River, which is between Orlando and Daytona Beach, are in major flood stage and threatening all-time records. Both will remain that way through the weekend.

CNN Meteorologist Brandon Miller contributed to this report.

Pasco and Hernando counties warn of historic flooding from nearby rivers and lakes

Pasco and Hernando counties in Florida are warning some residents to get to higher ground as flooding from nearby rivers and lakes is starting.

“Pasco County is experiencing historical flooding in low-lying areas and in several neighborhoods around the county near our rivers and lakes,” the county said in a post on its Facebook page. “Water is quickly rising in these areas, and we encourage you to LEAVE and get to higher ground NOW.”

Hernando County put out a similar warning on Facebook as well, saying there is “flooding near and along the Withlacoochee River.”

Even though the state is a day out from Milton passing through, Florida’s extremely flat terrain can cause rivers to drain more slowly, which has been seen in recent years following hurricanes and tropical storms.

The death toll from Hurricane Milton continues to rise. Here’s what you should know

A truck drives through a flooded street in South Daytona, Florida, on Friday.

The death toll from Hurricane Milton and tornadoes associated with the storm continues to rise, with officials reporting at least 17 deaths.

While Florida grieves, any new deaths from the storm’s aftermath could probably be prevented if residents heed warnings, Gov. Ron DeSantis said.

Here are other headlines you should know:

Cleanup and recovery efforts:

  • Florida’s largest power company Duke Energy called on people to be careful picking up debris from the storm, since live power lines could be hidden underneath the rubble.
  • While visiting Hillsborough County to see the damage from Milton, Sen. Rick Scott also urged residents to take precautions amid cleanup. He reminded residents not to drive through standing water, touch downed power lines or operate generators inside their homes.
  • The crane that came crashing down into a large St. Petersburg office building during Hurricane Milton is not a sign construction companies should face more regulations to prevent such damage, DeSantis said Friday.

Post-storm assessments:

  • Milton produced an exceptionally strong tornado from a tropical cyclone in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, according to a storm damage survey conducted Thursday by the National Weather Service in Miami. The tornado was the strongest one from a tropical system in the state in more than a half-century, according to a CNN review of NOAA data. The preliminary EF3 rating could increase based on additional damage found in what’s likely to be a “multi-day survey,” according to the weather service.
  • Milton also drove feet of storm surge onto Florida’s Gulf Coast, causing water levels there to rise at least 5 to 10 feet above ground level, according to preliminary estimates from the National Hurricane Center.

Evacuations and recommendations:

  • The sheriff of Florida’s Hillsborough County urged residents who live near rivers and creeks to leave Friday morning, warning river flooding was expected to only worsen as the day progressed. The Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office is helping residents in Valrico, Florida, evacuate flooded areas, the sheriff’s office told CNN’s Isabel Rosales.
  • Milton obliterated homes and killed at least 16 people when it plowed through the entire width of Florida. But officials say the devastation could have been far worse had residents not heeded urgent warnings to evacuate.
  • Power blackouts and gas shortages are some of the main concerns facing Tampa residents in the aftermath of Milton, says Mayor Jane Castor. “If you don’t have to go anywhere, don’t,” she urged residents.
  • Tampa authorities are also urging drivers to be careful as the city contends with dark traffic lights and flooded roadways.
  • City manager Dana Souza of Sanibel, located on a barrier island off the coast of Florida, warns residents to not use their toilets or showers “because there is the risk that sewer can back up into your home, which we don’t want you to experience at all.”

Resources: 

  • More than three in four gas stations in the Tampa Bay area have no fuel as of Friday afternoon, according to gas price-tracking platform GasBuddy. The outages are a problem across the state in the aftermath of Milton. As of 1:32 p.m. ET, 29.9% of Florida’s gas stations had no fuel, according to GasBuddy. That’s up slightly from Friday morning and amounts to more than 2,100 gas stations without fuel.
  • DeSantis assured residents, “we do have a lot of fuel in the state of Florida” as areas continue to face gas shortages.

Federal response:

  • FEMA administrator Deanne Criswell said while her agency has enough money to “support the immediate needs” of disaster survivors of Hurricanes Helene and Milton, it will need more funding passed soon.
  • People affected by Hurricane Helene are still able to apply for financial relief from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).
  • President Joe Biden on Sunday will visit areas of Florida hit by Milton, the White House announced Friday.

She went into labor as Milton bore down on Florida. Local deputies were there to help

Polk County Sheriff's deputies helped a pregnant woman, who was in labor during Hurricane Milton, get to a hospital in time for her to have her baby.

As Hurricane Milton bore down on Polk County, Florida, just outside Orlando, the local sheriff’s office received a call just after 3 a.m. – a woman was going into labor.

First responders were unable to dispatch an ambulance because of high winds, so the sheriff’s office sent deputies to family’s home on Thursday.

A deputy drove Zenia, the expecting mother, and her partner, Javier, to a nearby hospital, according to a Facebook post from the Polk County Sheriff’s Office. Other deputies drove a relative in a separate patrol car.

“Our deputies went back to the hospital later in the day to check up on everyone and learned that Zenia gave birth to a baby girl named Jade at about 1:30 p.m.,” the sheriff’s office said.

More than 2.1 million Florida customers remain without power

More than 2.1 million Florida customers are still in the dark across the state as of 4 p.m. Friday, down from more than 3.3 million people Thursday morning, according to PowerOutage.us.

Most outages are happening in along Florida’s Gulf Coast in Hillsborough County, where more than 460,000 outages were reported. Around 60% of customers in Manatee County, south of Hillsborough County, remain without power.

Duke Energy reports more than 750,000 of its Florida customers are experiencing outages.

Don't use your toilet or shower, warns Sanibel city manager

The city of Sanibel, located on a barrier island off the coast of Florida, has “been through a rough couple of days,” city manager Dana Souza said during a Friday afternoon news conference.

“Our infrastructure has suffered, and that’s what we’re working diligently to get back online,” Souza said.

Power is down across the island, which means that the sewer system is also down, according to the city manager.

He added that the city is using portable generators that have been provided to “key areas,” and officials have requested 50 more generators and pumps. This means there may be “partial electric services” to provide some sewer coverage if there is a “lengthy delay” in getting the island back online, he said.

The city has been processing around 2.7 million gallons of water a day from the sewer system, Souza added.

“That water has to be extracted from the system before we can really start to resume services for our sanitary sewer system,” he said.

Even if the city does become completely energized all at once, it will take around two days to get the system up and running, according to Souza.

Debris piles from Helene still appear largely intact after Milton tore through Florida's Anna Maria Island

Puddles from Hurricane Milton's storm surge are seen in an area of Holmes Beach on Anna Maria Island, Florida. On the edges of the flooded area sits debris piles from damage caused by Hurricane Helene's own storm surge on the island.

When Hurricane Helene’s storm surge rolled through Anna Maria Island on Florida’s Gulf Coast two weeks ago, it caused extensive damage that residents told CNN the island had never seen before.

The island was just beginning to dig out and pile up the objects and materials destroyed by those floodwaters when Hurricane Milton set its sights on the area. And there was a big fear among residents and officials that those debris piles — which CNN observed stretching along every single road on the island — would become missiles during Wednesday’s storm.

New aerial images from Vexcel Imaging shows those trash piles are largely still intact. Despite storm surge and high winds, they still line the roadways, and the bulk of them do not appear to have moved significantly.

The images do show the island is covered in significant amount of new, albeit smaller debris, in addition to floodwaters.

Alafia River one of many slow-motion flood disasters in Florida post-Milton   

Connor Hughes and Kaylee Swenson walk through floodwaters from the Alafia River on Friday in Lithia, Florida.

Milton’s deluge across central and north Florida is leading to a number of river flooding situations as the water slowly drains into the Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic Ocean.

The Alafia River in Lithia, just east of Tampa, has risen around 15 feet since Wednesday night when Milton dumped 10-18 inches of rain around the Tampa area.

The river crossed major flood stage on Thursday afternoon and continued to rise up and over 24 feet on Friday. This is the second highest level on record, and highest since the Hurricane of 1933.

While the Alafia at Lithia appears to be cresting on Friday afternoon, it is not expected to drop below major flood stage until Monday, meaning the flood waters will be very slow to recede.

This is a pattern that is playing elsewhere in the region as well, as Florida’s extremely flat terrain causes the rivers to drain high water very slowly, something seen in recent years as well following hurricanes and tropical storms hitting the state.

The Hillsborough River north and east of Tampa has also seen its levels swell, reaching all-time record levels at multiple locations and flooding many low-lying areas CNN toured on Thursday.

Some locations downstream, closer to the city of Tampa, are still rising and will flood more areas in the coming days.

The Anclote River north of Clearwater and the St. Johns River between Orlando and Daytona Beach are also in major flood stage and threatening all-time records, and both will remain that way through the weekend.

Sailboat owner says “all hell broke loose” while riding out Milton with his cat

Lenny Lopez, a Florida native who has lived on boats for more than four decades, says he feared losing his vessel of 25 years after riding out Hurricane Milton at a marina in Ruskin with his cat, Roscoe.

“For the first time in all my life – and I’ve brought boats in (during) horrible storms – I never thought I was ever going to lose a boat,” Lopez, who turned 67 two days before Milton made landfall, told CNN Friday.

“For a little while there it was like, ‘we break loose, it’ll be in pieces in 10 minutes,’” Lopez said. He lives west of St. Petersburg across the Tampa Bay.

Lopez said at around 11 p.m. ET Wednesday, Milton’s winds shifted and “all hell broke loose.”

“You’re shaking about, you know, it’s like riding on a roller coaster for four hours,” he said.

Lopez’s sailboat received minimal damage, he said.

What to do if your home was hit by Hurricane Milton — or if you’re trying to find out

Hurricane victims returning to damaged houses face a torrent of challenges: Flooding. Mold damage. Insurance headaches. Deadly hidden hazards.

And many deaths happen after the hurricane has passed — when residents don’t take precautions, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has said.

Here’s how to stay safe, get help and take the first steps toward recovery:

Don’t go home until it’s truly safe: Evacuees should “return home only when local officials say it is safe to do so,” the Federal Emergency Management Agency says.

If you see a flooded road, officials stress a life-saving but frequently ignored mantra: “Turn around, don’t drown.”

If it’s too dangerous to go home, search for open shelters in your area on the American Red Cross or Salvation Army websites. You can also download the FEMA Mobile App to find open shelters, text SHELTER (or REFUGIO in Spanish), and your ZIP code to 4FEMA (or 43362).

Use extreme caution when you’re home: “Walk carefully around the outside of your home to check for loose power lines, gas leaks, and structural damage,” the National Weather Service says.

Carry a battery-powered flashlight if you don’t have power, but “turn on your flashlight before entering a vacated building,” according to the NWS. “The battery could produce a spark that could ignite leaking gas, if present.”

Beware of mold and clean safely :“If your home has been flooded and has been closed up for several days, assume your home has mold,” the CDC says. “You need to completely dry everything, clean up the mold, and make sure you don’t still have a moisture problem.”

The agency posted a list of ways to eliminate and prevent mold growth, with or without electricity.

Read more about how to recover from a catastrophic hurricane.

Milton spawned Florida's strongest tornado from a tropical system in more than a half-century

A car flipped onto its side is seen on October 10 in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida.

The EF3 tornado that struck Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, on Wednesday was the strongest tornado from a tropical system in the state in more than a half-century, according to a CNN review of NOAA data.

Two F3 tornadoes on June 19, 1972, from Hurricane Agnes were the last twisters as strong. Agnes’ tornadoes had maximum winds between 158 and 206 mph, which is equivalent to an EF3 or stronger tornado today. The F or Fujita scale for rating tornadoes was replaced by the EF or Enhanced Fujita scale in 2007.

Damage surveys conducted by the National Weather Service in the coming days could reveal more strong tornadoes, but most tropical systems produce short-lived and weaker ones.

Most – just over 93% – of the more than 1,700 tornadoes produced by tropical systems from 1995 to 2023 were rated as an EF0 or EF1, according to data from the Storm Prediction Center. There had only been five EF3 or equivalent tornadoes from tropical systems in the US from 1995 to 2023, according to the SPC.

But this year, hurricanes Beryl, Debby, Helene and Milton all produced at least one EF3 tornado in the US. A tropical system has not produced an EF4- or EF5-equivalent tornado anywhere in the US in decades, according to the center.

Two of the strongest tropical tornadoes on record occurred in the 1960s. Hurricane Carla produced an F4 tornado – equivalent to an EF5 tornado today – in Texas in 1961 and Hurricane Hilda produced an F4 tornado in Louisiana in 1964.

More than three in four gas stations in the Tampa Bay area have no fuel as of Friday afternoon, according to gas price-tracking platform GasBuddy.

The outages are a problem across the state in the aftermath of Hurricane Milton. As of 1:32 p.m. ET, 29.9% of Florida’s gas stations had no fuel, according to GasBuddy. That’s up slightly from Friday morning and amounts to more than 2,100 gas stations without fuel.

In the Tampa-St. Petersburg area, 77.5% of the gas stations had no fuel, GasBuddy reports. That’s up from 73% as of 9:57 a.m. ET.

In Sarasota, 62.1% of gas stations were dry, up from 54% Friday morning.

Gas station outages also ticked slightly higher in the Fort Myers-Naples area to 42.4%, and Orlando to 35.2%.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said Friday afternoon that authorities are working to distribute fuel “as fast as humanly possible” and noted the state still has inventory of 1 million gallons of gas.

Patrick De Haan, head of petroleum analysis at GasBuddy, urged drivers to stay calm and use caution.

“Please slow down- while you may be trying to get back home, Port Tampa is NOT yet open meaning gasoline supplies REMAIN CONSTRAINED,” De Haan said in a post on X. “Please consider carefully coming back or filling up. FUEL WILL SOON FULLY FLOW, but this panicking will make it MUCH worse.”

Congressman describes "devastating" damage after aerially surveying areas hit by Milton

After aerially surveying the impacts of Hurricane Milton in Manatee County, Florida, on Friday, Rep. Vern Buchanan said what he saw “was pretty devastating.”

“A lot of homes kind of almost rolled into the water — I’ve never seen it before, I’ve lived on the water for 30 years, I’ve never seen anything like it — where the sand just moves up in the house,” Buchanan said.

The congressman said homes in Anna Maria Island and Longboat Key got 4 feet of sand blowing into them.

The congressman commented on the large scale of cleanup work now facing officials. “We’ve got a big job ahead of us, to really make sure it [sand] gets back where it needs to go,” he said.