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Rescuers race to free people trapped by Hurricane Helene after storm kills at least 40 in 4 states

Hurricane Helene left an enormous path of destruction across Florida and the entire southeastern U.S. on Friday, killing at least 40 people in four states, snapping trees like twigs, tearing apart homes and sending rescue crews on desperate missions to save people from floodwaters.
The Category 4 hurricane knocked out power to some hospitals in southern Georgia, and Gov. Brian Kemp said authorities used chainsaws to clear debris and open up roads. The storm had maximum sustained winds of 140 mph when it made landfall late Thursday in Florida’s rural Big Bend area, home to fishing villages and vacation hideaways where Florida’s Panhandle and peninsula meet.
Moody’s Analytics said Friday it expects $15 billion to $26 billion in property damage.
The damage extended hundreds of miles northward to northeast Tennessee, where a “dangerous rescue situation” unfolded after 54 people were moved to the roof of the Unicoi County Hospital as water rapidly flooded the facility. All staff and patients were rescued and no one was left at the hospital as of late Friday afternoon, Ballad Health said.
In North Carolina, a lake featured in the movie “Dirty Dancing” overtopped a dam. People in surrounding neighborhoods were evacuated, although there were no immediate concerns it would fail. People also were evacuated from Newport, Tenn., a city of about 7,000 people, amid concerns about a dam near there, although officials later said the structure hadn’t failed.
Tornadoes hit some areas, including one in Nash County, N.C., that critically injured four people.
Helene’s devastation comes as climate change exacerbates conditions that allow such storms to thrive, rapidly intensifying in warming waters and turning into powerful hurricanes and typhoons, sometimes in a matter of hours.
“It took me a long time to breathe,” Laurie Lilliott said of the moment she found her home destroyed in Dekle Beach, Fla.
As she surveyed the damage, her name and phone number were still inked on her arm in permanent marker, an admonition by Taylor County officials to help identify recovered bodies in the storm’s aftermath. The community has taken direct hits from three hurricanes since August 2023.
All five who died in one Florida county were in neighborhoods where residents had been told to evacuate, said Bob Gualtieri, the sheriff in Pinellas County, which includes St. Petersburg. He said people who stayed because they didn’t believe the warnings wound up hiding in their attics to escape the rising water.
“We tried to launch boats, we tried to use high-water vehicles and we just met with too many obstacles,” Gualtieri said. He said the death toll could rise as emergency crews go door to door in the flooded areas.
More deaths were reported in Georgia and the Carolinas, including two South Carolina firefighters who were killed when a tree struck their fire truck.
Video on social media sites showed sheets of rain coming down and siding coming off buildings in Perry, Fla., near where the storm arrived. One local news station showed a home that was overturned, and many communities established curfews.
“It’s really heartbreaking,” said Stephen Tucker, after the hurricane peeled off the brand-new roof at her church in Perry. It had to be replaced after last year’s Hurricane Idalia.
When the water rose up to Kera O’Neil’s knees inside her home in Hudson, Fla., she knew it was time to escape.
“There’s a moment where you are thinking, ‘If this water rises above the level of the stove, we are not going to have not much room to breathe,’” she said, recalling how she and her sister waded through chest-deep water with one cat in a plastic carrier and another in a cardboard box.
President Biden said he was praying for survivors as the head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency headed to the area. The agency has deployed more than 1,500 workers, and they helped with 400 rescues by late morning.
In Tampa, some areas could be reached only by boat. Officials elsewhere warned that the water could contain live wires, sewage, sharp objects and other debris.
“If you are trapped and need help please call for rescuers — DO NOT TRY TO TREAD FLOODWATERS YOURSELF,” the sheriff’s office in Florida’s Citrus County warned in a Facebook post.
Nearly 4 million customers were without power Friday in Florida, Georgia and South Carolina, according to poweroutage.us, which tracks utility reports.
In Georgia, an electrical utility group warned of “catastrophic” damage to the state’s utility infrastructure, with more than 100 high-voltage transmission lines damaged. And officials in South Carolina, where more than 40% of homes and businesses were without power, said crews needed to cut their way through debris just to determine what was still standing in some places.
The hurricane came ashore near the mouth of the Aucilla River on Florida’s Gulf Coast — about 20 miles northwest of where Hurricane Idalia came ashore last year at nearly the same ferocity. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said the damage from Helene appeared to be greater than the combined damage of Idalia and Hurricane Debby in August.
“It’s tough and we understand that. We also understand that this is a resilient state,” DeSantis said at a news conference in storm-damaged St. Pete Beach, Fla.
Atlanta was drenched, with just mailboxes and car roofs poking out of the water in some neighborhoods.
As the hurricane’s eye passed early Friday near Valdosta, Ga., a city of 55,000 near the Florida line, dozens of people huddled in a darkened hotel lobby as wind howled outside. Helene is the third storm to strike the city in just over a year.
“I feel like a lot of us know what to do now,” said Fermin Herrera, 20, cradling his sleeping 2-month-old daughter in a downstairs hallway of the hotel. “We’ve seen some storms and grown some thicker skins.”
Soon after it crossed over land, Helene weakened to a tropical storm, then a tropical depression. Forecasters said it continued to produce catastrophic flooding and some areas received more than a foot of rain. A mudslide in the Appalachian Mountains washed out a section of an interstate at the North Carolina-Tennessee state line.
In North Carolina, forecasters warned of flooding that could be worse than anything seen in the last century. Evacuations were underway in several areas of the state Friday, and around 300 roads were closed.
School districts and multiple universities canceled classes. Airports in Florida that had closed reopened Friday, and inspectors were out examining bridges and causeways along the Gulf Coast to get them back open to traffic quickly, the state’s transportation secretary said.
Before hitting the U.S., Helene swamped parts of Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula, flooding streets and toppling trees as it brushed the resort city of Cancun and passed offshore. In western Cuba, Helene knocked out power to more than 200,000 homes and businesses as it brushed past the island.
Helene was the eighth named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season, which began June 1. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has predicted an above-average Atlantic hurricane season this year because of record-warm ocean temperatures.
Smith, Payne and Hollingsworth write for the Associated Press. Payne reported from Tallahassee, Fla., and Hollingsworth reported from Kansas City, Mo. AP journalists Seth Borenstein in New York; Jeff Amy in Atlanta; Russ Bynum in Valdosta; Danica Coto in San Juan, Puerto Rico; Andrea Rodríguez in Havana; Mark Stevenson and María Verza in Mexico City; and Claire Rush in Portland, Ore., contributed to this report.

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