ASHEVILLE, N.C. − At least 100 people were dead and over 2 million homes and businesses remained in the dark Monday across the Southeast, the region under siege from historic flooding driven by Hurricane Helene and its remnants.
Hundreds of water rescues have taken place across Florida, Georgia, the Carolinas, Tennessee and Virginia since Helene's brutal landfall in Florida's Big Bend area late Thursday.
Atlanta totaled more than 11 inches of rain in 48 hours, smashing a record that stood for almost 150 years.Western North Carolina took the brunt of the devastating rains, and more than 30 inches was recorded in some areas. Houses floated away from subdivisions, bridges crumbled, semi-trucks were tossed into mangled piles. Mud, tree branches and food from local grocery stores flowed into the streets.
The confirmed death toll here in Buncombe County alone climbed to 35 and was expected to rise, the sheriff said Monday. Officials have received about 600missing persons reports, although many are expected to be resolved when communications are restored.
"We don't have water and we do not have power across most of the county," County Manager Avril Pinder said. "The roads are still incredibly dangerous."
Supplies were being airlifted because ground transportation was limited with so many damaged roads, and the county planned to begin distributing food and water Monday afternoon.
Gov. Roy Cooper activated more than 500 soldiers and airmen from the National Guard. More than 200 vehicles and aircraft, including hoist and emergency aviation assets and high-water response vehicles, were feverishly working to save lives.
President Joe Bidenassured communitiesreeling from the devastationthat the "nation has your back," and that help was on the way.
"We'll continue to serve resources including food, water, communications, and lifesaving equipment will be there," Biden said Monday. "I mean it − as long as it takes to finish this job."
On the ground:How flood damage is cutting off North Carolina communities from emergency relief
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Developments:
∎ AccuWeather has increased its estimate of the total damage and economic loss from Hurricane Helene to between $145 billion and $160 billion. Helene is expected to be one of the costliest storms in U.S. history because of its overwhelming storm surge, winds and flooding, the weather service said.
∎ VicePresidentKamala Harriswill cut short a campaign trip and plans a visit to the storm-ravaged Southeast, her office told Reuters. Former President Donald Trump, who said he will visit the region, has criticized Harris for campaigning as the tragedy unfolded. He has also continued to hold rallies.
∎ Energy production in the Gulf was recovering. Only 3% of crude oil and 1% of natural gas production in the Gulf of Mexico remained shut down in the aftermath of HurricaneHelene, the U.S. Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement said late Sunday.
Storm tracker:Hurricane Center tracking Tropical Depression Joyce, 4 other systems
Biden sends FEMA chief to Asheville 'until the situation has stabilized'
Biden sent FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell to be on the ground in Asheville, North Carolina, "until the situation has stabilized," the federal agency said Monday. FEMA teams are deploying to Mission Hospital and are currently treating patients, while another team is moving to Blue Ridge Regional Hospital in Spruce Pine.
Ten federal search and rescue teams are on the ground in the region and another nine teams are on the way, for a total of 900 active personnel, FEMA said. Also being being brought to the region: 25 trailer-loads of meals, 60 trailer-loads of waters, and C-17 cargo plane full of food, water and other essentials.
According to a news release, 200 federal ambulances have been provided to the state. The agency has also supplied 40 Starlink satellites to help with responder communications, and 18 helicopters are on standby to help deliver additional resources to affected areas.
− Will Hofmann, Asheville Citizen-Times
DeSantis sends rescuers for Floridians in North Carolina
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis ordered rescue teams to mobilize air lifts for people from Florida who may be stranded in western North Carolina in areas with blocked roads and power and cellphone outages.
“Operation Blue Ridge” launched Sunday, an effort similar to one he’d ordered almost a year ago to help Florida residents in Israel following the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks by Hamas, and from Haiti earlier this year amid that country’s political violence.
Recovery efforts are ongoing in Florida in the aftermath of Helene. At least 11 people were killed in the state, including at least nine in Pinellas County − hundreds of miles from where the storm made landfall.
DeSantis said he missed a call from Biden because he was in the air viewing damage. The governor added that the federal government should concentrate its efforts on helping those in western North Carolina, though he said Florida might ask for more federal assistance in the future.
− Gray Rohrer, Tallahassee Democrat
'Biblical devastation':Helene leaves trail of destruction
'It's a race against time': Historic town begins digging out
MARSHALL, N.C. − Days after flooding devastated this tiny town of less than 800 people, cleanup crews on Monday worked to remove thick mud and debris while business owners pulled belongings from waterlogged downtown buildings. The historic town, set along the French Broad River north of Asheville, was slammed by a deluge that reached to the first-floor roof of some downtown buildings. It also damaged a water-treatment plant across the river.Most of the town was without power and cellular service. The damage extended to some businesses that in recent years have become part of an artistic renewal in the downtown area. As excavators and equipment buzzed around him, Chad Adamowski and his friends were shoveling mud out of his tattoo and music store, hoping to tear out walls before mold set in.“It’s a race against time,” he said.
− Chris Kenning
World Central Kitchen distributing food in Asheville
Disaster relief organizations are providing free food and supplies in the Asheville area amid massive, urgent need. Global relief organizationWorld Central Kitchenbegan distributing free meals for the public on Monday. WCK is also providing meals in Florida and Georgia. The organization was founded by celebrity chef José Andrés in 2010 to provide fresh food on the frontlines of humanitarian disasters in the United States and around the world.
"Asheville, we are here," the group tweeted Monday. "WCK is in North Carolina working to reach flooded communities and families stranded by Hurricane Helene."
− Tiana Kennell, USA TODAY NETWORK
More:Power outage maps: Mass outages remain in Carolinas, Georgia, Florida after Helene
Worry for neighbors amid communication blackouts
In Burnsville, North Carolina, Suzanne Vale on Monday posted the names of her neighbors in a group Facebook chat in hopes someone knows how they’re doing. She is among hundreds of people turning to social media for help to contact friends and loved ones in parts of the Southeast that were battered by Helene. Communication blackouts created by Helene's fury have made obtaining information difficult.
As the storm approached Florida, Vale and her husband drove from their Burnsville home in the Blue Ridge Mountains to their house in Dunedin, a coastal town west of Tampa. While their Florida home was unscathed, their worry immediately became centered on Burnsville, where washed-out bridges and roads have left residents trapped with no means to communicate with the outside world.
“No one’s been able to get a hold of anyone up there. I’m sure they’re OK, it's just not knowing,” she said, speaking about her friends and neighbors. “It's beyond comprehension what’s happened.”
− Christopher Cann
'The whole side of the mountain came down'
RED HILL, N.C. – James Waters watchedHelene's torrential rains and fierce winds decimate his farm among the hilly slopes of Appalachian North Carolina, snapping trees, ripping out fences and causing a landslide.
It took him a full day to dig to the main road with a farm excavator. He found windy roads strewn with downed power lines, fallen limbs, thick mud and debris. In some areas,cars were washed into ditches. One neighbor found a dead body near a riverbank, he said.
No one had cell service or power. People couldn’t find out whether their relatives were alive or dead. Waters knew he had a huge recovery ahead of himself. But his family had survived. So, like others in the area, he first grabbed his chainsaw to help clear roads and check on neighbors.
"The whole side of the mountain came down," he said. "Then it filled up the valley with mud." Read more here.
− Chris Kenning
North Carolina town bands together:'That's what we do'
Helicopters, thermal drones used in some rescues
Dale Buckner, CEO of Global Guardian, said his international security firm has supported and evacuated over 400 people from disaster areas across the Southeast. Some of the rescues required helicopters and even thermal drones, he said.
"While we’ve seen the highest demand from clients in the North Carolina region, we are actively conducting wellness checks and delivering food and water supplies along the storm’s path," he said. "The devastation ... and its impact will be felt for months to come."
Did the historic Biltmore Estate flood from Helene?
The Biltmore Estate in Asheville is assessing damage and will remain temporarily closed because of "significant flooding, impassable roads and widespread power outages in our region," according to a statement on the social media account for the historic house and museum. Museum officials were asking people to check biltmore.com/weather-updatefor the latest. As of Sunday, a message on the website said officials were "working to reopen" but provided no timeline.
George Vanderbilt’s 250-room French Renaissance château, which took six years to build in the late 19th century, was the"largest undertaking in residential architecture in the nation," according to the estate website. The home contains more than four acres of floor space, 35 bedrooms, 43 bathrooms and 65 fireplaces. Read more here.
− Juan Buitrago, Asheville Citizen Times
Hurricanes on repeat: Floridians grow weary, wary
CEDAR KEY, Fla. − The innkeeper wonders whether it’s worth rebuilding this town dotted across a small archipelago −again. The clam farmer worries about impact on his harvest. And the business leader contemplates what Mother Nature will throw at them next as the climate changes.
Tens of thousands of residents of Florida’s Big Bend region are confronting the same fears in the wake of Hurricane Helene. And those feelings are increasingly shared by coastal residentsfrom Alaska to California and Maine as stronger, more frequent storms and rising ocean levels upend their lives and livelihoods.Many insurers already have curtailed coverageor withdrawn entirely from some areas, indicating the long-term risk.
“Natural disasters are natural disasters,” saidinnkeeeper Ian Maki, who has lived through five hurricanes since moving to the island community southwest of Gainesville in 2018. “But these don’t feel natural anymore.” Read more here.
− Trevor Hughes
Hurricanes on repeat:Natural disasters 'don't feel natural anymore'
Anxious relatives gather outside emergency room
People waited outside the emergency room at HCA Healthcare’s Mission Hospital in Asheville, checking the conditions of relatives who had been admitted. Shawn Hensley, 47, of Black Mountain, told the Citizen Times, part of the USA TODAY NETWORK, his 65-year-old mother arrived at the hospital the night before because she was running low on oxygen. Hensley and neighbors had to chainsaw a tree blocking his car so he could get out of his neighborhood.
“It looks like Mother Nature just stomped all over that little town,” Hensley said. “It’s just destruction everywhere you look.”
Biden expected to visit the region affected by Helene
Biden plans to visit the areas ravaged by Helene this week once he can do so without disrupting emergency services, the White House said.
"It's tragic," Biden told reporters on Sunday, pledging recovery assistance after declaring major disasters in Florida and North Carolina and emergencies for Florida, North Carolina, Tennessee, South Carolina, Georgia, Virginia, and Alabama. "You saw the photographs. It's stunning."
Trump planned to visit Valdosta, Georgia, on Monday to receive a briefing on storm damage, his campaign said.
More storms developing in Atlantic Basin
The National Hurricane Center is tracking five systems in the Atlantic basin. The biggest concern to Florida and the U.S. is a disturbance in the Caribbean Sea, which could become atropical depression later this weekas it follows a path similar to majorHurricane Helene.Forecasters are advisingresidents along the Gulf Coastto closely monitor the system.
Another system, Tropical Storm Kirk, was expected to become a "large and powerful" system later this week, the hurricane center said. Current models show it curving north into the middle of the Atlantic, well away from the U.S. Read more here.
Cheryl McCloud, USA TODAY NETWORK - Florida
How to donate and assist Helene victims
As authorities assess Helene’s destruction along a large portion of the country, rescuers and other emergency workers have been deployed to hard-hit and isolated communities.Relief efforts and fundshave also been created to help victims and survivors.
Federal officials have advised against sending unsolicited donated goods or heading toward disaster-affected areas. The Federal Emergency Management Agency noted there are no requests, at the moment, for donations other than money.
Here are some organizations that accept donations to help those impacted by the storm:
- American Red Cross: Red Cross volunteers from Florida to Tennessee are helping communities by providing food, disaster supplies, shelter, and additional assistance. The organization is takingdonationsto fund relief efforts.
- The Salvation Army: The organization has deployed teams to provide emergency aid, food, and long-term recovery services for survivors and rescue workers. To contribute to its efforts, visit its Hurricane Helene reliefdonation pagehere.
- GoFundMe: GoFundMe has set upa dedicated hubwith verified fundraisers for people and communities affected by the storm’s devastation. The company also has its ownHurricane Relief Fund, which provides cash grants to those who need help.
- Americares: The nonprofit focuses on emergency medical relief and hasset up a donation pageto help communities recover from Helene.
- All Hands and Hearts: The volunteer-based organization assists in short-term and long-term disaster recovery efforts and has launched aHelene fundto help with its 12-month response.
Contributing: Jacob Biba, Will Hofmann and Iris Seaton, Asheville Citizen Times; Doyle Rice, USA TODAY; Reuters