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Hurricane Idalia live tracker: Tropical Storm Idalia slams the Carolinas while Florida surveys aftermath



Flood waters from Hurricane Idalia inundate Steinhatchee, Florida

Tropical storm Idalia has left three people dead across Florida and Georgia as it continues to hammer North Carolina with heavy flooding.

Idalia ploughed into Florida as a Category 3 Hurricane on Wednesday morning before losing power as it moved inland through Georgia and the Carolinas.

Florida Highway Patrol said two men were killed in two separate weather-related road accidents on Wednesday morning. In Georgia, a man was killed by a falling tree while trying to clear another tree off a highway.

However on Thursday, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis said that no hurricane-related fatalities had been reported to the Medical Examiner’s Office.

Tropical Storm Idalia continues to lose power as it moves into the Atlantic Ocean on Thursday, the National Weather Service reported. However areas of flash, urban and moderate river flooding, with considerable impacts, are expected from eastern South Carolina through eastern North Carolina.

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Tree falls on Ron DeSantis’s mansion with his family inside as Hurricane Idalia rocks Florida

A 100-year-old oak tree toppled onto Florida Governor Ron DeSantis’ mansion in Tallahassee as Hurricane Idalia slammed into Florida.

The governor’s wife, Casey DeSantis, revealed the incident on X, formerly known as Twitter, saying she and her children were home at the time but no one was injured.

“Mason, Madison, Mamie and I were home at the time, but thankfully no one was injured,” she said. “Our prayers are with everyone impacted by the storm.”

Louise Boyle31 August 2023 15:03

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Tropical Storm Idalia – the latest

Tropical Storm Idalia is continuing to lose power as it moves into the Atlantic Ocean on Thursday, the National Weather Service reported.

However areas of flash, urban and moderate river flooding, with considerable impacts, are expected from eastern South Carolina through eastern North Carolina today.

Heavy rainfall is expected across the North Carolina coast through this afternoon but then conditions will begin to improve. There will be two to four inches of rain and up to five inches in some spots.

Coastal flooding is also expected in North Carolina today along with tropical storm force winds in parts of the US southeast coast.

Louise Boyle31 August 2023 14:35

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In pictures: Florida residents inspect aftermath of, and damage from, Hurricane Idalia

Lily Gumos, 11, of St. Pete Beach, Florida kayaks with her French bulldog along Blind Pass Road and 86th Avenue

(AP)

A man walks his motorcycle to Desoto Park after attempting to ride through an impassable South Bermuda Boulevard at Palmetto Beach

(AP)

A boat is stranded near to a road in the town of Jena, after Hurricane Idalia made landfall near Keaton Beach, Florida

(EPA)

Chad Hinchman, 40, walks through one of his rental Airbnb properties on Hibiscus Avenue South, Pasadena, which flooded overnight

(AP)

Makatla Ritchter (L) and her mother, Keiphra Line wade through flood waters after having to evacuate their home when the flood waters from Hurricane Idalia inundated it on 30 August 2023 in Tarpon Springs, Florida

(Getty Images)

Ken Kruse looks out at the flood waters from Hurricane Idalia surrounding his apartment complex in Tarpon Springs

(Getty Images)

Oliver O’Connell31 August 2023 14:05

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Why stormy weather this week could make or break Ron DeSantis

It’s no secret at this point that Ron DeSantis’s image has taken a hit since he hit his peak in November 2022 after he cruised to a nearly 20-point re-election as Florida governor in an otherwise dim year from Republicans. His lacklustre performance on the presidential campaign trail has led to many people questioning whether he can go the distance against Donald Trump in the GOP presidential primary.

And it looks like he might literally be facing even rougher waters than he already has weathered. This last week, a white gunman killed shot and killed three Black people at a Dollar General store in Jacksonville. In response, Mr DeSantis said that “the shooting, based on the manifesto that they discovered from the scumbag who did this, was racially motivated. He was targeting people based on their race.”

But when he attended a vigil in Jacksonville, a historically Republican city that recently elected a Democratic mayor, the residents of the city were not having it and they heckled the governor.

Mr DeSantis has staked his claim on making Florida a place where “wokeness” comes to die and has passed laws restricting how race is taught in classrooms in the state. Others Black leaders, including some Black Republican members of Congress, have also criticised the state’s middle school history curriculum, which says that enslaved people “developed skills” that could be “applied for personal benefit.”

Read more from Eric Garcia on how Hurricane Idalia will impact Ron DeSantis’s precarious political position.

Oliver O’Connell31 August 2023 13:45

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Map shows path of Hurricane Idalia

Rachel Sharp31 August 2023 13:27

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Biden declares state of emergency in South Carolina over Idalia

On Thursday morning, President Joe Biden declared a state of emergency in South Carolina over storm Idalia.

“Today, President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. declared that an emergency exists in the State of South Carolina and ordered Federal assistance to supplement State, tribal, and local response efforts due to the emergency conditions resulting from Hurricane Idalia beginning on August 29, 2023, and continuing,” he said in a declaration released by the White House. “The President’s action authorizes the Department of Homeland Security, Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), to coordinate all disaster relief efforts which have the purpose of alleviating the hardship and suffering caused by the emergency on the local population, and to provide appropriate assistance for required emergency measures, authorized under Title V of the Stafford Act, to save lives and to protect property and public health and safety, and to lessen or avert the threat of a catastrophe. “Specifically, FEMA is authorized to identify, mobilize, and provide at its discretion, equipment and resources necessary to alleviate the impacts of the emergency. Emergency protective measures (Category B), including direct Federal assistance, under the Public Assistance program will be provided in 23 counties and emergency protective measures (Category B), limited to direct Federal assistance, under the Public Assistance program will be provided in the remaining 23 counties. “Mr. Brian F. Schiller of FEMA has been appointed to coordinate Federal recovery operations in the affected areas.”

Rachel Sharp31 August 2023 13:25

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National Hurricane Center gives update on Idalia

“Tropical Storm #Idalia Advisory 19A: Heavy Rainfall and Life-Threatening Flash Flooding Continues In Portions of Eastern North Carolina. Winds Increasing Over the Outer Banks and Pamlico Sound,” the agency tweeted.

Rachel Sharp31 August 2023 13:05

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Hurricanes are getting stronger. Here’s why

As the global average temperature increases, largely due to the carbon emissions from burning fossil fuels, the ocean is taking a major hit.

The ocean has absorbed 90 per cent of warming in recent decades and all that extra heat is driving historically high water temperatures.

Warmer waters supercharge tropical cyclones with more heavy rainfall and storm surge as they come ashore.

While the frequency of hurricanes of tropical storms is not increasing, the chance that they become stronger, more destructive systems has increased by about 8 per cent per decade in the past 40 years, according to climate scientists.

The proportion of Category 4 and 5 tropical cyclones is projected to increase around the world in the coming decades due to human-caused warming, according to the latest report from the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

The Atlantic hurricane season, which runs from 1 June to 30 November, is forecast to be above average this year.

Oliver O’Connell31 August 2023 12:45

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Satellite images show before and after of Hurricane Idalia

A satellite view shows Ozello before and after flooding caused by Hurricane Idalia

(via REUTERS)

A satellite view shows Ozello before flooding caused by Hurricane Idalia in Florida, U.S., January 12, 2023

(via REUTERS)

A satellite view shows Ozello after flooding caused by Hurricane Idalia in Florida, U.S., on 30 August 2023

(via REUTERS)

A combination picture shows satellite images of Crystal River before and after flooding

(via REUTERS)

Rachel Sharp31 August 2023 12:30

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Watch: DeSantis warns against looting in aftermath of Hurricane Idalia

Oliver O’Connell31 August 2023 12:15





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