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Hurricane Helene made landfall on Florida's Big Bend late Thursday night. ... Florida, about 50 miles southeast of Tallahassee. Helene had sustained winds of abut 140 mph, ...
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. – More than eight months after Hurricane Helene devastated Florida's west coast, over 1,200 residents near St. Petersburg remain displaced, living in temporary shelters, packed in ...
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. - Hurricane Helene is a Category 1 storm but is expected to strengthen and potentially become a major Category 4 hurricane before making landfall over Florida on Thursday.
Hurricane Helene, an alliterative threat to life and property across much of Florida, remains on a collision course with the Florida Gulf Coast.Track expectations have changed little since Tuesday ...
Hurricane Helene blew by Florida's western Gulf Coast and then made landfall in the Big Bend, near Perry, Florida after 11 p.m. on Thursday. By Friday morning the storm was raging through Georgia ...
Officials are draining the water from Lake Lure to remove sediment and debris, revealing historic objects embedded in the dry ...
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Hurricane Helene is now predicted to reach Florida as a Category 4 hurricane, part of a frightening forecast of 130-mph winds and high storm surge that brings a dire scenario ...
Hurricane Helene ravaged Big Bend of Florida as a Category 4 storm, ... Aerial photos show utter devastation in Big Bend, near Tallahassee, and Steinhatchee, Florida, after Hurricane Helene.
Tallahassee residents warned to seek shelter ahead of Hurricane Helene 01:08. The division has moved some workers to Escambia County as a backup. Tallahassee is expected to get slammed by the storm.
The forecast cone for Hurricane Helene appeared to narrow on Thursday morning, indicating increased confidence in its projected path toward Tallahassee, Florida. Trump to enact tariffs on Mexico ...
The National Hurricane Center predicts Helene will make landfall in northern Florida as a Category 4 hurricane with a ‘deadly’ storm surge up to 20 feet.
Kevin Guthrie, the head of Florida’s emergency management department, rattled off the state’s bragging rights: debris is picked up 24/7 after a storm, power is restored within 120 hours, roads are ...