October 7, 2024, Hurricane Milton news

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Updated 1:17 AM EDT, Tue October 8, 2024
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Meteorologist describes the growing strength of Hurricane Milton
01:53 - Source: CNN

What we covered

? Hurricane Milton rapidly intensified at a mind-boggling rate into a Category 5 over the record-warm Gulf of Mexico. It is expected to grow in size, which means that although it may decrease in category, its dangerous impacts will be spread over a much larger area.

? Milton is forecast to make landfall on Florida’s Gulf Coast on Wednesday. Its dangerous eye and eyewall could come ashore anywhere from Cedar Key at the north to Naples at the south – including possibly in the Tampa or Fort Myers areas.

? It’s only been 10 days since Helene scoured Florida’s Gulf Coast with storm surge and slammed into the Big Bend as a Category 4. Now, officials are asking residents – still in recovery mode – to evacuate or prepare for another life-threatening storm.

? Sigue nuestra cobertura del huracán Milton en espa?ol.

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Our live coverage of Hurricane Milton has moved here.

Hurricane Milton weakens slightly but remains a dangerous Category 5 storm

A Florida Army National Guard member works to remove debris in the Pass-A-Grille section of St. Petersburg ahead of Hurricane Milton's expected landfall in the middle of this week on October 7.

Hurricane Milton’s maximum sustained winds have weakened slightly to 165 mph – down from 180 mph – which is still a Category 5 hurricane, according to an advisory from the National Hurricane Center.

The storm is located about 630 miles southwest of Tampa, Florida, and is moving east at 9 mph. It is forecasted to make landfall as a major Category 3 hurricane near Tampa late Wednesday.

The storm’s weakening is likely due to an eyewall replacement cycle, during which a large outer eyewall develops and becomes dominant as the inner eyewall shrinks and collapses. The process – common in major hurricanes – leads to slight weakening but also tends to cause the size of the hurricane to increase. As the outer eyewall begins to tighten, the hurricane can strengthen once again. In the absence of wind shear or land interaction, major hurricanes can sometimes experience several eyewall replacement cycles which cause their intensity to fluctuate.

Fluctuations in Milton’s intensity over the next 24 hours will be determined by the eyewall replacement cycle.

ZooTampa prepares its animals to ride out the storm

Team members work at ZooTampa in?preparation?for the potential impact of?Hurricane?Milton, in Tampa, Florida.

A menagerie of wolves, skunks, turtles, frogs and other animals are being secured at ZooTampa as the storm approaches, and zoo employees are preparing food, enclosures and other supplies to help the creatures ride out the storm.

“Precautions will be taken in the next 24 hours to ensure the security of our animals, including moving larger animals into their night houses, which are built to withstand major storms, and smaller mammals and birds into ancillary buildings,” the zoo said in a statement Monday.

Team members work at ZooTampa in?preparation?for the potential impact of?Hurricane?Milton, in Tampa, Florida.

The zoo has a hurricane preparedness plan in place, which includes securing loose items, stocking up on critter food, trimming trees and fueling generators.

“During the storm, a ride-out team made up of animal care, animal health, safety, maintenance, and horticulture will stay on-site to care for the animals, monitor life support systems, manage generators, and assess damage,” the zoo said.

The zoo will be closed from Tuesday through Thursday.

Florida aquarium relocating endangered coral and a sea turtle washed inland by Helene

The Florida Aquarium in Tampa will be closed Tuesday through Thursday, the tourist attraction announced Monday.

In preparation for Hurricane Milton, the aquarium’s coral conservation team is working with several organizations to move more than 4,000 juvenile corals and more than 100 broodstock from the Coral Conservation and Research Center in Apollo Beach.

The aquarium is the only facility in the world that cares for endangered pillar coral, according to a news release. It also has the largest number of reproductive size elkhorn coral. Colonies of both species are being relocated.

The corals are being sent to Atlanta (Georgia Aquarium), Key Biscayne (University of Miami) and West Palm Beach (Reef Institute). They include corals rescued from a marine heatwave?in the Florida Keys during the summer of 2023, the news release said.

A sea turtle that was found in a roadside ditch after Hurricane Helene’s storm surge is being moved from the sea turtle rehabilitation center in Apollo Beach to the Florida Aquarium’s Tampa campus, which can keep the animal on the second floor.

Tampa mayor's message to those who stay in evacuation zones: "You're gonna die."

Tampa Mayor Jane Castor speaks with CNN in an interview on October 7, 2024.

Tampa Mayor Jane Castor delivered a dire warning to residents who choose to stay behind in evacuation zones as Hurricane Milton rages toward Florida’s west coast.

Hillsborough County, where Tampa is located, has issued mandatory?evacuation orders?for those in Zones A and B, as well as those who live in mobile homes.

Helene was a “wake-up call,” Castor said. But the potential threat Hurricane Milton brings is “literally catastrophic,” she added.

See Hillsborough County’s evacuation zones here.

Tampa fire chief pleased with evacuations so far

Residents of Tampa, Florida, are heeding mandatory evacuation orders and leaving, Fire Chief Barbara?Tripp told CNN’s “Anderson Cooper 360” on Monday night.

“It’s been great. People are definitely listening this time,” the chief said.

She said that was one of the biggest concerns for Hurricane Milton preparations because during Hurricane Helene in September not as many people evacuated and her crews had to do a lot of rescues, putting the emergency responders in danger.

Law enforcement officers had been knocking on doors of homes in the mandatory evacuation zones ahead of Milton, the chief said. The county has opened shelters as safe havens for people to ride out the storm, she added.

FEMA has resources to respond to Helene and Milton, but misinformation is posing challenges, official says

Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas sought to combat misinformation surrounding disaster relief funding Monday night, telling MSNBC in an interview that “everybody should rest confident FEMA has the resources” to continue recovery efforts from Hurricane Helene and prepare for Hurricane Milton.

About 900 FEMA personnel and members of the Army Corps of Engineers are positioned in Florida ahead of Milton’s anticipated arrival Wednesday night, the secretary said.

“FEMA likes to say it is ‘FEMA-flexible.’ We can respond to multiple events at a single time,” Mayorkas said.

Mayorkas lamented the state of misinformation about relief efforts, telling host Jen Psaki he’s “not seen it ever before at this level.”

The secretary also expressed concern that misinformation might hinder the efforts of federal personnel on the ground.

“These are individuals who are putting their lives on the line to search and rescue for victims of Hurricane Helene, a hurricane of historic magnitude,” Mayorkas said. “It is very sad.”

Helene’s death toll rises to at least 235

Homes are seen in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene, in Chimney Rock Village, North Carolina, on October 2.

The death toll from Helene has risen to at least 235 across six states, according to CNN’s tally, after three additional deaths were announced Monday in Tennessee.

Helene is the second deadliest hurricane to strike the US mainland in the past 50 years, following Hurricane Katrina, which killed at least 1,833 people in 2005.

Here’s a breakdown of deaths from Helene by state:

  • North Carolina: 117 people
  • South Carolina: 48 people
  • Georgia: 33 people
  • Florida: 20 people
  • Tennessee: 15 people
  • Virginia: 2 people

Winds more than 58 mph could arrive in 48 hours to the coast where NASA, SpaceX and others have launch operations

Winds more than 58 mph could arrive in Florida within 48 hours, a post from Space Launch Delta 45?said?Monday.

Patrick Space Force Base and Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on Florida’s Atlantic coast have entered Hurricane Condition III because of the incoming winds, the post added.

Hurricane Condition III, otherwise known as Condition of Readiness III, means destructive winds are expected, according to the Navy.

Recently NASA announced it was postponing the launch of the Europa Clipper mission and had rolled the rocket back into the SpaceX hangar.

The splashdown of the Crew-8 astronauts returning to Earth from the International Space Station has also been pushed back until at least Sunday.

No sunshine and “ominous” skies in Tampa as Hurricane Milton approaches

With Hurricane Milton still more than 48 hours away, the skies over Tampa were already filled with thick gray clouds.

With Hurricane Milton soon to slam Florida, 29-year-old Jasmine Seales is busy packing her belongings in plastic bins to safeguard against flooding, and freezing water-filled Ziploc bags to keep her food fresh in the event of losing power.

“There’s no sunshine out here today,” Seales told CNN, looking out her window. “It looks so ominous.”

Seales lives in Tampa’s Sulphur Springs neighborhood, near the Hillsborough River, in Evacuation Zone A. A lifelong Tampa resident, Seales moved into her current apartment just three weeks ago and said it’s the first place she’s lived where storms have concerned her, especially after witnessing the damage left by Helene.

“I think we’re all taking this storm more seriously,” she said.

Seales lives in a duplex, and she and her landlord are doing what they can ahead of Milton’s arrival to ensure minimal damage. She said she’s going to put up a large old mattress as a barrier against her sliding glass doors, which face the river.

Tuesday, she plans to drive inland with her black cat, Spoopy, in tow to a friend’s apartment outside the evacuation areas.

FEMA has enough funds to support efforts on Helene and Milton, administrator says

FEMA has enough funds to get through Hurricane Milton, currently a category 5 storm, and continue recovery efforts from Hurricane Helene, Administrator Deanne Criswell told Fox News on Monday.

“We have enough funds to absolutely get through the response for this hurricane as well as the continued response for Hurricane Helene,” Criswell said.

Hurricane Helene?made?landfall on September 26, just after 11 p. m. ET, while Milton is expected to hit some of the same areas later this week.

Criswell emphasized FEMA personnel will be around to help no matter what.

“Just because somebody doesn’t see someone in a FEMA shirt, doesn’t mean that we’re not in the area,” she said.

Fire chief warns electric vehicle owners that saltwater submersion can cause fires

- Source: CNN " data-fave-thumbnails="{"big": { "uri": "https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/01-tesla-fire-florida.jpg?c=16x9&q=h_540,w_960,c_fill" }, "small": { "uri": "https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/01-tesla-fire-florida.jpg?c=16x9&q=h_540,w_960,c_fill" } }" data-vr-video="false" data-show-html="" data-byline-html="
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Updated 1:17 AM EDT, Tue October 8, 2024
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Tesla catches fire in garage after flooding from Hurricane Helene
01:09 - Source: CNN

Electric vehicles and other items with lithium ion batteries present a fire hazard if they are submerged in sea water and should be moved to higher ground ahead of the hurricane, Sanibel Island Fire Chief Kevin Barbot said at a Monday news conference.

“It is a true problem, and it is a hazard for your homes as we have had multiple fires due to saltwater submergence,” he told reporters.

He advised residents to move anything that uses a lithium battery – like electric bikes, lawn equipment, power tools – to higher ground or a second floor.

In Tampa, the city has opened parking garages for EV owners to park their vehicles there.

Tampa Mayor Jane Castor and Harry Cohen, Hillsborough County commissioner, said people lost their homes to fires caused by electric vehicles during Hurricane Helene.

“Combustion can occur in an instant or manifest weeks or months after exposure to salt water,” Cohen said. “Lithium ion batteries that have flooded or been exposed to salt water or any flammable chemicals, for that matter, should be disposed of at community collection centers or household hazardous waste events.”

Here’s what airlines and Florida airports are planning ahead of Hurricane Milton’s landfall

Airports and airlines are among those preparing ahead of Hurricane Milton making landfall in the Tampa Bay area this week.

Here’s what travelers should know:

  • Tampa International Airport announced it will suspend operations early Tuesday, and Orlando International Airport will cease commercial operations on Wednesday.
  • Sarasota Bradenton International Airport will close at 4 p.m. Tuesday and will reopen “once safe to do so,” officials said on X.
  • St. Petersburg-Clearwater International Airport said its terminal will close after its last flight on Tuesday and will be closed through Thursday. “The airport is in a mandatory evacuation zone and is not a public shelter. Prepare and stay safe,” airport officials said on X.
  • Southwest Florida International Airport in Fort Myers said most airlines are planning to operate Tuesday, but no flights will be operating on Wednesday or Thursday.

As for potential travel headaches, several major airlines have issued travel alerts ahead of the hurricane:

  • American Airlines said it is monitoring the path of the storm and has issued an alert indicating it will allow customers whose plans are affected to rebook without change fees, according to a post on X.
  • United Airlines explained on its website travelers whose flights are affected by the storm can reschedule their trip and have their change fees and fare differences waived, but their new flight must depart no later than October 19.
  • Southwest Airlines warned travelers that its service for certain dates and cities may be disrupted amid the storm. Customers may cancel their reservation or change their origin/departure to any of the affected Florida airports without additional charges.
  • Delta Air Lines also explained future travel rebooking options in its own weather alert.

Floridians jam highways to flee Milton

Drivers are facing backups on interstate highways near Tampa as residents head north to flee Hurricane Milton.

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By Sharif Paget, CNN
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Updated 1:17 AM EDT, Tue October 8, 2024
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Highways were overflowing with traffic as people departed north Tampa ahead of Hurricane Milton making landfall.
Tampa highway overflows with traffic as evacuations take place ahead of Hurricane Milton
00:58 - Source: CNN

The Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office shared an aerial view on Monday, showing the mass exodus on Interstate 75 and Interstate 275. “We urge drivers to drive safely and expect extended delays,” the sheriff’s office wrote in a post on X.

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Updated 1:17 AM EDT, Tue October 8, 2024
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Tampa area highways backed up as state prepares for Hurricane Milton's arrival.
Tampa area highways backed up as state prepares for Hurricane Milton's arrival
00:14 - Source: CNN

Tampa Mayor Jane Castor said at a Monday news conference the interstate traffic was at a standstill because many people are following evacuation orders. She said residents who have not evacuated yet should “prepare quickly and get out of the city.”

- Source: CNN " data-fave-thumbnails="{"big": { "uri": "https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/screenshot-2024-10-07-at-5-22-46-pm.png?c=16x9&q=h_540,w_960,c_fill" }, "small": { "uri": "https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/screenshot-2024-10-07-at-5-22-46-pm.png?c=16x9&q=h_540,w_960,c_fill" } }" data-vr-video="false" data-show-html="" data-byline-html="
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Updated 1:17 AM EDT, Tue October 8, 2024
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Cars backed up as they evacuate the Tampa area ahead of Hurricane Milton.
Cars backed up as they evacuate the Tampa area ahead of Hurricane Milton.
00:23 - Source: CNN

Here's a look?Inside the Hurricane Hunter cockpit as officials fly into Hurricane Milton

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Updated 1:17 AM EDT, Tue October 8, 2024
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Hurricane Hunters give an inside look at their aircraft’s cockpit as they fly into Hurricane Milton on Monday evening.
Inside Hurricane Hunter cockpit as they fly into Hurricane Milton.
01:29 - Source: CNN

Footage from inside the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration WP-3D Orion?aircraft?shows officials flying straight into Hurricane Milton,?according?to a post on X.

“These flights collect critical data that helps improve forecasts and support hurricane research,” the post said.

Milton strengthens further; hurricane and storm surge warnings issued for Florida

Milton continues to strengthen and is now packing sustained winds of 180 mph with stronger gusts, according to the National Hurricane Center. It remains a dangerous Category 5 hurricane.

Milton has strengthened an astounding 90 mph since 1 a.m. CT Monday, officially doubling its strength in under 24 hours.

Hurricane warnings have been issued for parts of Florida with impacts likely to start within 48 hours. Storm surge warnings have also been issued for parts of the coast.

Landfall is expected to occur in Florida Wednesday night, likely somewhere near the Tampa Bay area. Milton is forecast to weaken a bit ahead of landfall, but will grow larger in size and remain a formidable hurricane at landfall and after.

Residents in Pinellas encouraged to leave county ahead of Hurricane Milton

Rich Lorenzen and his son Sam Grande carry their belongings as they prepare to evacuate their home before the arrival of Hurricane Milton, in St. Pete Beach, Florida, on Monday.

Evacuation zones in Pinellas County, Florida, have expanded ahead of Hurricane Milton and residents are even being encouraged to leave the county altogether.

All residents in zones A, B and C, as well as all mobile home parks, are under mandatory evacuations, Emergency Management Director Cathie Perkins said Monday.

She added that residents should not stay home because they feel like they’re a burden due to special needs or pets.

“We are happy to come and get you, to come and help you, to put you in our shelters,” Perkins said.

Nearly 600 ambulances in “active evacuation” of medical facilities in the greater Tampa Bay area

Hospitals and nursing homes throughout the state of Florida are taking heed to the advice of officials as Hurricane Milton is expected to hit this week, according to Florida Division of Emergency Management Director Kevin Guthrie.

There are 500 to 600 ambulances “in active evacuation right now of medical facilities in the greater Tampa Bay region.”

“We have numerous hospital facilities evacuating right now,” Guthrie said. “I don’t want to say this is the largest – I’ll say it’s the largest since I’ve been here in 2018 for Hurricane Michael.”

Guthrie said he’s asked for even more ambulances from FEMA, as some of them are staged throughout the Southeast area.

Pre-landfall declaration request from FEMA for support approved DeSantis says

A pre-landfall declaration request from the Federal Emergency Management Agency for support for Hurricane Milton has been approved, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said Monday afternoon in a news conference.

“We have made a pre-landfall declaration request from FEMA for support and the federal government has approved a portion of our request for pre-landfall items,” DeSantis said. “And we expect the remaining parts of our request subsequent to landfall for debris and individual assistance, one the storm hits, will also be approved.”

The governor repeatedly urged those on the West coast of the state to prepare for Milton’s impact.

“You should have a plan and you should be executing your plan,” DeSantis said while mentioning the several county evacuations enacted Monday. “You do have time to get out. So please do it. Please execute that plan now – at this point – if you are in one of those danger zones.”

Tolls in west, central and Alligator Alley of Florida have been suspended and will be continued to be suspended until no longer necessary, the governor said.

Uber is also working to finalize a code for free rides for those evacuating to shelters, the governor added.

Here are the Florida counties under evacuation orders

Motorists head north on Interstate 75 on Monday near the Tampa Bay Area of Florida.

Evacuations are being ordered in many Florida counties as Hurricane Milton continues to barge toward the peninsula, the Florida Division of Emergency Management said. The agency has also advised, “You only need to evacuate tens of miles, not hundreds!” and said shelters are open across the state.

Charlotte County: Evacuations have been ordered for residents in the areas known as Red Zone-A and Orange Zone-B – generally those on the water along the Gulf, Charlotte Harbor and the Myakka and Peace rivers, and immediately inland, a county map shows.

Citrus County: Beginning at 8 a.m. Tuesday, residents in any structure incapable of withstanding 110 mph winds will be under a mandatory evacuation order, the sheriff’s office said. That includes campers, tents, mobile homes and manufactured homes.

Collier County: The cities of Naples, Marco Island and Everglades City as well as the communities of?Goodland and Chokoloskee are under voluntary precautionary evacuation notices, which affect zones A and B, according to the county website. A mandatory evacuation order for zones A and B is set to begin at 6 a.m. Tuesday.

Glades County: A voluntary evacuation order will begin Tuesday at 1 p.m. for residents in mobile homes, RVs and low-lying areas.

Hernando County: Mandatory evacuations have been issued starting on Tuesday at 8 a.m. for all areas west of US Highway 19, which includes Zones A, B and C — as well as residents living in coastal and low-lying areas and manufactured homes across the county. A shelter will open at the Challenger K-8 School at 8 a.m. Tuesday.

Hillsborough County: A mandatory evacuation order began at 2:30 p.m. Monday for all residents in Zones A and B, according to the county, which encompasses the city of Tampa. The orders also apply to residents in mobile and manufactured homes.

Lee County: Residents in Zones A and B are under evacuation orders that went into effect at noon Monday, officials said. The residents of Sanibel, on a barrier island along Florida’s west coast, face a mandatory evacuation order starting Tuesday night, city officials said. Residents must be off the island by 10 p.m. Tuesday as first responders will likely have to discontinue service when severe winds kick in, officials said Monday.

Manatee County: Evacuation orders went into effect at 2 p.m. Monday for residents in zones known as Level A, Level B and Level C. The evacuation order also includes people who live in mobile homes or RVs.

Miami-Dade County: Officials has asked medically vulnerable people and residents of mobile home parks to evacuate, Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said Monday. “We are standing up evacuation centers and also working with our hospitals for the medically vulnerable,” she said, adding the order was given out of an abundance of caution. Officials are encouraging people to stay with family or friends in “an area outside of the evacuation order,” according to the county’s website.

Okeechobee County: A voluntary evacuation order will go into effect for resident in low-lying areas and mobile homes on Tuesday at 5 p.m.

Pasco County: A mandatory evacuation order is in effect for residents in Zones A, B and C as well as everyone in manufactured homes, mobile homes, RVs and residents in low-lying, flood-prone areas. Earlier, the county said a voluntary evacuation order is in effect for people with a designated “Special Needs Resident” and anyone who “would be vulnerable in the event of a power loss.”

Pinellas County: The county has issued an immediate mandatory evacuation order for residents in Zones A, B, and C and all mobile homes county-wide. Access to barrier islands will be limited to residents, business owners, and employees between 7 p.m. Monday and 7 p.m. Tuesday so people can prep homes and businesses. A mandatory evacuation order went into effect Sunday for residential health care facilities in Zones A, B and C.

Sarasota County: Residents in Levels A and B are being directed to evacuate, while those in Level C “should be prepared” to do so if Milton intensifies. Residents planning to leave the area should do so today, the county said. “If you wait, you will get stuck in traffic.”

Volusia County: As of Wednesday at 8 a.m.,?an evacuation order will be in effect for areas east of the Intercoastal Waterway, people in manufactured and mobile homes, individuals in low-lying or flood-prone areas, according to County Manager George Recktenwald. Camp sites and RV parks are also ordered to evacuate. “We’re also coordinating with our cities to evacuate properties that are still deemed vulnerable from previous storm events,” he said.

Orlando mayor declares a state of emergency

Orlando?Mayor Buddy Dyer declared a state?of emergency Monday in anticipation of Hurricane Milton’s landfall this week.

“The city’s Emergency Operations Center will move?to a Level 2 Activation tomorrow, Tuesday, October 8, at 10 a.m. and expects to move to a Level 1 Full Activation on Wednesday, October 9 at 12 p.m.,” a?release from his office?said following a news conference.

The city is also offering sandbags — up to 10 per household — at Camping World Stadium on Monday and Tuesday, the release added.

Orlando is the county seat for Orange County,?one of many counties under an emergency declaration order from Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.

"Get out as quickly as you can,” Tampa mayor says

Authorities in Tampa are urging residents to evacuate the area quickly on Monday as Hurricane Milton approaches the Florida coast.

“Listen, get out as quickly as you can. Do not wait,” said Tampa Mayor Jane Castor in a Monday news conference.

Castor said she hopes residents will?follow evacuation orders – during Hurricane Helene, many stayed home and waited to call 911 until the storm surge trapped them, she said.

“This is going to be an event like none other,” Castor said. “Helene was mostly a water event for us. This is going to be wind, water, storm surge, rain, you name it. It’s going to bring everything towards our community.”

Tampa Police Chief Lee Bercaw joined the mayor’s plea to residents, noting that first responders may not be able to reach them.

“If you stay in an evacuation zone, I can’t promise you that you’ll be safe. And I can’t promise you that I’m going to send my officers out and put their lives at risk during the peak of the storm. You must evacuate now,” Bercaw said.

Milton's strengthening fueled by warm water made hundreds of times more likely by climate change, analysis shows

Category 5 Hurricane Milton is feeding off exceptionally warm water made significantly more likely by climate change, a new analysis released Monday shows.

Human-caused climate change over the past two weeks made the at-or-near record-breaking ocean temperatures fueling Hurricane Milton right now 400 to 800 times more likely to occur, according to the nonprofit research group Climate Central.

Hurricane Milton traveled through this warm water Monday and exploded at an exceptional rate into a rare Category 5 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 175 mph. The storm’s winds increased by 95 mph in less than 24 hours or less, a rate nearly without precedent.

The attribution study was done by analyzing real world observations as well as climate models to establish whether a particular extreme weather event like Hurricane Milton could have happened in a world without global warming.

Rapidly intensifying storms are becoming more common as the world warms from the burning of fossil fuels, which Gilford said is only “amplifying this threat.”

White House pushes back after DeSantis declines to return calls from Biden and Harris on storm recovery

The White House dinged Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis for reports he has refused calls from President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris as officials continue recovery efforts following Hurricane Helene and prepare for Hurricane Milton, telling reporters Monday, “It’s up to him if he wants to respond to us or not.”

A White House official tells CNN that Harris has reached out to the GOP governor multiple times after Helene made landfall in his state, but that the DeSantis has not taken her calls. When?Biden visited Florida last week to survey storm damage, DeSantis declined to join him, instead holding a news conference four hours south of the area Biden toured.

“The President has reached out around Hurricane Helene. He reached out. It is up to the governor – it is really up to the governor,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Monday.

CNN has asked the White House, the Harris campaign and DeSantis’ office about details. It’s not the first time the Florida governor has eschewed a meeting with Biden following a disaster; in 2023,?he declined to meet with Biden on a trip to the state following Hurricane Idalia.

White House doesn't rule out canceling foreign travel in response to Hurricane Milton

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre holds the daily press briefing at the White House on Monday in Washington, DC.

The White House does not rule out canceling or rescheduling President Joe Biden’s upcoming trip to Germany and Angola as Hurricane Milton bears down on Florida, the White House said Monday.

Just weeks away from Election Day, the White House appears keenly aware of the optics of the president potentially being absent in the wake of a second catastrophic storm.

“The president is monitoring this very, very closely,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told CNN’s MJ Lee. “He’s gotten updates about the hurricane and (is) obviously continuing to get updates on what is happening on the ground as after the horrible hurricane, Hurricane Helene, and so that will continue.”

She added she didn’t “have anything to share about a change in travels or schedule.”

Asked about the timing of the trip, just a month before the presidential election, she said there wasn’t much time left during Biden’s presidency for him to address some of his international priorities.

It’s not unprecedented for presidents to cancel foreign travel due to domestic crises. Biden, for example, canceled a trip to Australia and Papua New Guinea because of negotiations over raising the debt ceiling. But the president has made cooperation and fostering relationships with foreign partners a cornerstone of his administration.

Biden faced criticism for not visiting Hurricane Helene’s destruction earlier, but the White House has said he didn’t want to take away scarce resources on the ground to dedicate to a presidential visit.

"Unprecedented is the only word that describes it"

Hurricane Milton blew past expectations when it exploded from a tropical storm late Sunday morning to a Category 5 hurricane just a day later.

Milton’s rapid intensification has been astonishing and prompted notable reactions from experts.

“(We’re) getting historical rates of intensification with Milton today,” hurricane expert Andy Hazleton posted on social media Monday. “Unprecedented is the only word that describes it.”

“Milton is undergoing an exceptionally rapid intensification phase,” Tomer Burg, another meteorologist weighed in.

The hurricane’s strength is “truly jaw-dropping,” Eric Webb, another meteorologist added. “The rate of intensification of Hurricane Milton this morning is nothing short of legendary (and) borderline unprecedented.”

Only two Atlantic hurricanes have ever strengthened more in a 24-hour period than Milton.

And if exceptionally rapid intensification wasn’t enough, the storm has also reached an incredibly low pressure. At the most basic level, hurricanes are just very strong low pressure systems and the lower the pressure drops, generally the stronger the system gets.

Milton’s pressure has been lowering by amounts “you almost never see,” according to Hazelton: “Certainly not in the Gulf in October, certainly not (for a storm) moving east.”

FEMA has enough funding to respond to Helene and Milton, official says

FEMA has enough funding in its coffers to respond to both Hurricanes Helene and Milton, a top agency official told reporters Monday.

“We want to assure everyone we have the resources we need to respond to both Helene and Milton,” Keith Turi, acting associate administrator for response and recovery, said Monday.

Turi said he didn’t have the exact balance of the agency’s disaster relief fund, which slipped into the red earlier this year before Congress unlocked funding from the agency’s fiscal year 2025 budget.

“We have the resources we need to respond now, we’re in the beginning of a new fiscal year, and that provided some additional resources for us to be able to respond,” Turi said. He added his agency is going to closely monitor their fund’s balance and it is possible FEMA could go back into immediate needs funding in the coming months.

Out-of-state restoration crews will have to come from farther away to help Florida, utilities spokesperson says

The back-to-back nature of Hurricanes Helene and Milton hitting the mainland United States makes it more difficult to organize crews to help in the aftermath of the coming storm.

“Because many crews throughout the Southeastern United States are in the Carolinas to restore and rebuild electric and water infrastructure for those devastated by Hurricane Helene, our mutual aid assistance is constrained,” said Jenise Osani, a spokesperson for the Orlando Utilities Commission, at a Monday afternoon news conference.

Line technicians, tree trimmers, safety assessors and others who are part of “mutual aid resources” will have to travel to Florida from states farther away, she said.

However, “once they arrive, they’ll work alongside our crews and employees to restore power lines and fix any customer issues 24/7 as long as it is safe to do so,” Osani said.

Florida also hasn’t had time to remove much of the debris left behind by Hurricane Helene, which poses a double danger as Milton approaches. Officials have warned the unsecured debris could be picked up and tossed around by the hurricane, becoming dangerous projectiles and it could clog and litter flooded areas, hampering post-hurricane relief efforts.

Florida will not extend Monday voter registration deadline ahead of Hurricane Milton, DeSantis says

Florida is not planning to extend its voter registration deadline as parts of the state brace for Hurricane Milton and continue to recover from the devastation caused by Hurricane Helene, Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis said Monday, rejecting calls from voting rights groups to provide more time to residents in the storm-battered state.

Though the governor is urging residents in the Tampa Bay area to heed evacuation orders ahead of Hurricane Milton’s expected landfall on Wednesday, he said that there’s “nothing inhibiting” unregistered voters from registering ahead of the Monday deadline.

“People can register today, and then that’s that. There’s nothing inhibiting your registering today. The storm has not hit yet,” DeSantis said during a press conference in response to a question about whether the storm would provide any flexibility in registration.

He continued: “Now, after the storm, we will see what damage is there. And if I have to do a similar executive order that I did in (Hurricane) Ian and then I did for Helene, we’re happy to do it. But we’re not going to change any registration deadline. You can register today, and there doesn’t need to – there’s no reason to open that up.”

A coalition of voting rights groups have for days been calling for the governor to extend Monday’s deadline until October 15. A letter sent by more than two dozen organizations to DeSantis last week with that demand was sent again to him on Monday, according to?The League of Women Voters of Florida, one of the groups behind the push.

“It is unfair to disenfranchise newly arrived Floridians, people who have just reached the legal age to vote, and others who need to register to vote in Florida due to the impacts of natural disasters that are beyond their control,” the group said in a?statement?on Monday.

CNN?previously reported?that in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene, which had a devastating impact on parts of Florida, Georgia and North Carolina, election officials in those places have begun to work quickly to ensure voters can still securely cast early ballots.

An incredibly clear look at Milton's eye

A brand-new weather satellite is showing the world an incredible glimpse at Milton’s small, compact eye.

The eye of a hurricane is an area of relatively calm weather surrounded by the storm’s fiercest winds – the eyewall. Milton’s eyewall has 175 mph sustained winds and even stronger gusts: some of the strongest recorded in an Atlantic hurricane. Powerful storms develop clear “pinhole” eyes like what’s shown below.

The satellite that captured this view was launched into orbit in June and will continue to undergo testing and calibration until it’s deemed fully operational.

Milton's danger won't stop at the coast

Milton will grow in size and expand its life-threatening impacts over a larger area as it hits Florida.

This threat is reflected in the tropical alerts in effect over Florida. Hurricane watches extend well inland over much of the Peninsula and almost reach the Atlantic coast. Hurricane-force winds could begin within 48 hours where these alerts are active.

Alerts for Milton in Florida as of Monday afternoon.

Milton’s most dangerous inland threats will be damaging wind gusts, flooding rainfall and tornadoes.

“Prepare for strong tropical storm and/or hurricane-force wind gusts” with “a few tornadoes possible” on Wednesday, the National Weather Service in Melbourne, Florida, warned Monday.

There are “less than 48 hours before conditions become too dangerous for storm preps,” the service stressed.

Hurricane-force winds may batter interior areas for a time before Milton starts to deteriorate over land. Even then, tropical storm-force winds will roar over the state.

The Orlando area could record wind gusts of 60 to 80 mph Wednesday night. Wind gusts of 40 to 60 mph are also possible as far east as Daytona Beach to south of the Space Coast.

The combination of strong winds and heavy rain could bring down trees and power lines and cause considerable outages, including in some areas where it was just restored after Helene.

Asheville authorities have?recovered 9 people killed and found 85% of those missing in wake of Helene

A member of the FEMA Urban Search and Rescue Task Force searches a flood-damaged property with a search canine in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene along the Swannanoa River on October 4 in Asheville, North Carolina.

Authorities in Asheville have located over 85% of the people reported missing after Helene forged a path of destruction through the city, police said. Within the city limits of Asheville, authorities have recovered nine deceased persons. Countywide, 72 people have been reported dead.

According to Asheville Police Chief Mike Lamb, crews have located 336 of the 394 people who had been reported missing.

“We are actively working 60 cases of people that are missing and not heard from,” Lamb?said Monday.

Over the weekend, Lamb said, crews performed five rescues from missing persons and welfare checks, including an older woman who was trapped in her home by fallen trees who did not have the oxygen she needed and a man who had broken his leg and was trapped in his property without mobile phone service.

Asheville currently has a curfew from 7:30 p.m. to 7:30 a.m., according to Lamb, but as power and water is restored and businesses reopen authorities will reevaluate.

Miami-Dade County hands out 5,000 sandbags ahead of Hurricane Milton

Volunteers from the city of Miami fill sandbags to help residents prepare for the arrival of Hurricane Milton in Miami on October 7.

Hurricane Milton isn’t?forecast?to track?directly over?Miami-Dade County. But officials in the densely populated county that’s just barely above sea level?are already giving out sandbags and asking some residents to evacuate because Milton will still impact the area.

“We know that storms are unpredictable,” Miami-Dade County Chief of Public Safety James Reyes said Monday. “And while we often focus on the?cone of concern, the outer bands carry damaging winds and bring large amounts of rain.”

Mayor Daniella Levine Cava has signed a local state of emergency.

“The likely impacts to Miami-Dade County include substantial rain, localized flooding, and the possibility of sustained tropical-storm-force winds starting as early as tomorrow night,” Levine Cava said Monday.

Much of Miami-Dade County, home to 2.7 million people, is?less than 10 feet above sea level.

The county has distributed more than 5,000 sandbags to residents and will continue?giving away sandbags at local parks?until they run out, the mayor said.

She also urged some residents to evacuate.

“Out of an abundance of caution, we are announcing a voluntary evacuation of mobile home parks and medically vulnerable residents,” Levine Cava said.?“We are standing up evacuation centers and also working with our hospitals for the medically vulnerable.”

Hurricane Milton is the planet's strongest storm of the year

Hurricane Milton’s strength is eye-popping. With sustained winds of 175 mph, it’s the strongest storm to occur anywhere on the planet this year.

Milton is also the strongest hurricane in the Atlantic since 2019’s Dorian, which had maximum sustained winds of 185 mph.

The hurricane is one of the 10-strongest hurricanes on record for the Atlantic. It’s tied for ninth-strongest with several other storms including 2005’s Katrina and 2017’s Maria.

The Atlantic’s strongest-ever hurricane was 1980’s Allen which had maximum sustained winds of 190 mph.

Flocks of birds seen flying in Hurricane Milton's eye

Hurricane Hunters flying through Milton to take invaluable measurements observed something shocking this afternoon: flocks of birds flying in the storm’s eye.

It’s not the first time birds have been seen in the eye of a storm, according to NOAA. The eye of the hurricane is a calm refuge from the storm’s 175 mph winds raging in the wall of strongest winds surrounding the eye. Winds in the eye usually stay at or below 15 mph, according to NOAA.

Orlando is working to lower lake levels and clear debris ahead of Hurricane Milton

Orlando is working to lower lake levels and clear debris in the area in anticipation of Hurricane Milton’s landfall this week.

“We’re proactively lowering lake levels and staff is working around the clock to make sure that the debris is clear,” City Engineer Lucy Phillip said in a news conference Monday afternoon.

Mayor Buddy Dyer said the city is also closing all non-essential offices, including city hall, Wednesday and Thursday.

“As you prepare your home, please remember to secure all yard debris including branches and leaves and bundles and bags. Get them away from the curb. Get them away from storm drains. Get them away from roadways,” Dyer said.

Residential and commercial trash services and recycling will be operating normally Monday and Tuesday but suspended starting Wednesday at noon, the mayor said.

“Evacuate. Don’t wait, do it now”: Manatee County expands evacuation zones ahead of Hurricane Milton

Manatee County in Florida is expanding evacuation zones ahead of Hurricane Milton, officials announced Monday.

Along with Levels A and B, Level C will also be under an evacuation order beginning Monday afternoon, Matt Myers, Manatee County’s emergency management chief, said.

The county will open eight shelters, including several local schools, to accommodate evacuees and transportation will be offered from area islands to shelters every hour beginning at 2 p.m.

“Evacuate. Don’t wait, do it now. We’re taking Milton very seriously,” Myers said.

“This storm … looks like it could be a lot worse than Helene,” Florida State Senator Jim Boyd reiterated. “Get out if you’re in an evacuation zone, don’t take chances. There’s no tomorrow if you are caught in the midst of this storm.”

The storm has a potential surge of eight to 12 feet along coastal areas of the county, Jodie Fiske, director of public safety, said.

During the storm, potable water service to island cities will be shut off beginning Tuesday, government office will be closed Tuesday through Friday and all parks will be closed until further notice, Fisk said.

Her advice to people who are not in a flood zone or are not familiar with a storm of this caliber: “You run from the water, you hide from the wind,” Fisk said. “Just be safe, above all else, just be safe.”

Florida suspends tolls on major highways to assist in evacuations

Sam Grande carries his belongings as he prepares to evacuate his home before the arrival of Hurricane Milton, in St. Pete Beach, Florida, on Monday.

Tolls on 24 highways in 13 Florida counties are being suspended for a week to assist people who are evacuating ahead of the arrival of Hurricane Milton.

“Suspending tolls across the central and west part of the state and Alligator Alley offers an additional option for families to easily get out of the storm’s direct path,” Department of Transportation Secretary Jared W. Perdue said in a statement Monday.

Tolls are suspended for the following roadways:

Collier and Broward Counties

  • I-75 “Alligator Alley”

Citrus, Hernando, Hillsborough, Pinellas and Pasco Counties

  • Suncoast Parkway
  • I-4 Connector
  • Selmon Expressway
  • Veterans Expressway
  • Gateway Expressway
  • 275 Express
  • Pinellas Bayway
  • Sunshine Skyway Bridge

Osceola, Orange, Lake, Seminole, Sumter and Polk Counties

  • Turnpike Mainline between I-75 (MP 309) and Canoe Creek Service Plaza (MP 229)
  • S.R. 453
  • S.R. 451
  • Wekiva Parkway
  • Apopka Expressway
  • Beachline Expressway
  • Central Florida GreeneWay
  • East-West Expressway
  • I-4 Express
  • Western Beltway
  • Osceola Parkway
  • Poinciana Parkway
  • Southern Connector Extension
  • Seminole Expressway
  • Polk Parkway

Monster Category 5 Milton as seen from space

Milton is a powerful, but relatively compact storm tracking over the southern Gulf of Mexico.

The hurricane developed an eye that could be seen from space today – the mark of an incredibly strong storm.

Its moisture is fostering stormy weather over parts of Mexico and a large portion of the Gulf while its center moves east, ready to track parallel to Mexico’s Yucatán Peninsula.

Category 5 Hurricane Milton churns in the Gulf of Mexico early Monday afternoon.

The crew on the International Space Station also got a good look at Milton today.

- Source: CNN " data-fave-thumbnails="{"big": { "uri": "https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/still-21021497-50143-still.jpg?c=16x9&q=h_540,w_960,c_fill" }, "small": { "uri": "https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/still-21021497-50143-still.jpg?c=16x9&q=h_540,w_960,c_fill" } }" data-vr-video="false" data-show-html="" data-byline-html="
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Updated 1:17 AM EDT, Tue October 8, 2024
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still_21021497_50143_still.jpg
International Space Station passes over Hurricane Milton
00:55 - Source: CNN

Milton now has 175 mph winds

Milton continues to strengthen, with the monster Category 5 hurricane winds increasing by 15 mph to 175 mph, according to the National Hurricane Center.

The storm’s winds have increased 85 mph on Monday alone.

Orlando airport to close Wednesday ahead of Hurricane Milton

Orlando International Airport will close Wednesday morning as inland Florida communities prepare for Hurricane Milton, airport officials announced on X Monday.

The announcement comes only hours after Tampa International Airport said it will suspend operations and close to the public Tuesday at 9 a.m.

Milton could weaken before landfall, but it could also grow. Here's what that would mean

Milton is forecast to weaken a bit before making landfall, but it will also grow in size and expand its life-threatening impacts over a larger area as it does.

“This system is still likely to be a large and powerful hurricane at landfall in Florida, with life-threatening hazards at the coastline and well inland,” the National Hurricane Center warned Monday.

Current forecasts weaken Category 5 Milton to a Category 3 storm at the time of landfall on Wednesday night. Hurricane categories only consider wind speeds, so while a weaker storm could reduce wind damage near the core of the storm, other impacts are more locked in.

Milton will dump heavy, flooding rain on the state, spread damaging winds across Florida, create “dangerous rip currents” and create potentially record-breaking storm surge, which could be worsened by its growing size.

Surge could begin in Florida well before landfall as Milton’s size and wind field expand while it weakens.

Hurricane Katrina went through a similar process in 2005: It weakened from a Category 5 to a Category 3 at landfall but that didn’t alter its devastating surge.

Up to 12 feet of storm surge is possible from the Bonita Beach area up to nearly the Big Bend region. Several feet of surge are possible along the rest of the state’s coast.

Milton is headed for one of America’s most populous metro areas, one that has seen steady growth

Hurricane Milton is heading for one of Florida’s most populous metropolitan areas, one that has seen constant growth for the last several years.

The Tampa, St. Petersburg and Clearwater metro area ranked 5th in the top 10 US metro Areas in annual population growth from 2022 to 2023, according to the US Census. Its population grew?by more than 51,600 in the span of a year and?by more than 167,000 people from 2020 to 2023.

Pinellas County, home to the cities of St. Petersburg and Clearwater, is the most densely populated Florida county – with 3,425 people per square mile, according to county statistics. Hillsborough County, where Tampa is located, is the state’s third-most populous county, and has seen the second-most growth of any Florida county?in a decade from 2012 to 2022, according to the US Census.

Hillsborough County is home to 1.4 million residents, and state statistics estimate more 1.5 million residents living there this year. The city of Tampa itself is home to nearly?385,000 people.

Pinellas, in particular, has seen incredibly fast growth that the county’s existing infrastructure hasn’t been able to keep up with, said Jesse Keenan, a professor of sustainable real estate at Tulane University’s School of Architecture.

“The planning of these counties hasn’t kept up with the population growth,” Keenan told CNN.

Population growth has also surged in other badly hit parts of the state like Fort Myers-Cape Coral metro area, which was devastated by Hurricane Ian in 2022. Southwest Florida’s population has exploded in part because it has been a relatively cheap place to buy a home.

But relaxed state building regulations have also contributed. In 2011, Florida’s Republican-controlled state legislature loosened decades-old state regulations meant to keep development in high-risk areas at a reasonable pace, or to discourage developers from building on low-lying wetlands, Keenan told CNN in 2022.

James Taylor, Luke Combs and Eric Church will headline NC concert for Helene relief

North Carolina musicians James Taylor, Luke Combs and Eric Church along with guitarist Billy Strings will headline “Concert for Carolina” this month to raise?money for?Helene relief effort in the state,?according to organizers of the event.

The concert will take place?October 26 at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte with all proceeds going toward aid relief, organizers?said.

“This concert took so much planning, work, and coordination from so many people. I’m so thankful to everyone who helped make this a possibility on such short notice,”?Combs posted online.

Explore Asheville?and the Tourism Development Authority have pledged $1 million as presenting sponsors, said Vic Isley, President and CEO of the organizations.

Across the state additional concerts and fundraisers have popped up, including a fundraiser to benefit the?North Carolina Disaster Relief Fund?featuring?Sturgill Simpson, in Cary at?Koka Booth Amphitheatre?on October 21 — the night he was previously scheduled to play in Asheville before it was cancelled due to Helene damage.

Return of Asheville water service is “going to be a while,” North Carolina governor says

There is “progress” in the recovery in western North Carolina?nearly two weeks after Hurricane Helene but still no timeline for water service restoration in Asheville, the region’s largest city, Gov. Roy Cooper said Monday in a news conference.

More than 50 water systems were impaired or destroyed?as?the storm’s?flooding and wind knocked out power across the region. The recovery is a community-by-community process, and for Asheville, “it’s still going to be a while,” Cooper said.

“There is progress being made, but we don’t know yet,” he said, noting engineers were working to get water back on. “We don’t have a specific timeline on Asheville (or) Buncombe (County) right now.”

Further, Cooper and FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell pushed back against claims FEMA – now a key federal player in preparations for Hurricane Milton – had not been helpful in the Helene recovery.

“People who are saying that are misinformed or intentionally providing misinformation,” Cooper said. Thousands of local, state, and federal officials?have been?in the area helping coordinate the recovery, and more than $31 million in aid has been distributed to?survivors, with 1,700 people sheltered in hotel rooms.

“There’s a lot that’s happening right now to help people where they are at,” he said.

Rumors FEMA has hindered the delivery of supplies are “absolutely false” and hurt the recovery effort, Criswell said.

“Frankly, that type of rhetoric is demoralizing to our staff that have left their families to come here and help the people of North Carolina,” she said. “We will be here as long as they’re needed.”

Other rumors about FEMA’s aid program have caused people to avoid applying for assistance out of fear.

“If I can’t get them to apply, I can’t get them money and resources they are eligible for. I’ve heard rumors that if you take $750 (from FEMA) and don’t pay it back, we’re going to take your home: Absolutely false,” she said.

READ MORE: CNN fact-checks lies about the Helene response

Milton could be the first major hurricane to strike Tampa in more than 100 years

Milton is on a collision course with Florida and the latest forecast from the National Hurricane Center indicates it could come ashore in the Tampa Bay area Wednesday evening. If this track verifies, it’ll be historic.

“If the storm stays on the current track, it will be the worst storm to impact the Tampa area in over 100 years,” the National Weather Service in Tampa warned Monday.

The only major hurricane to ever come within 50 miles of Tampa was an unnamed storm in 1921 that moved just north of the city as the equivalent of a Category 3 hurricane, according to data from NOAA.

A zoomed-in look at Milton's track shows it making landfall as a Category 3 hurricane Wednesday evening in the Tampa Bay area.

Milton’s current track takes its center over St. Petersburg and directly through a portion of Tampa Wednesday evening. It’s still too early to say with certainty this will be exactly where Milton comes ashore. The storm could wobble north or south over the next two days.

Where Milton makes landfall will make a massive difference in terms of impact.

A direct strike on the Tampa Bay area could trigger worst-case scenario threats for the region. Historic storm surge could plunge the entirety of some low-lying areas underwater as hurricane-force winds and torrential slam the region.

If Milton makes landfall north of the region, the Tampa Bay area will still get considerable storm surge and strong winds, but may miss out on the heaviest rainfall the hurricane has to offer.

Storm surge levels would remain dangerously high with a track south of the region, but it could lower them slightly. It would also unleash higher, double-digit rainfall totals.

Voting will proceed in Buncombe County despite Helene’s devastation, official says?

Despite the devastation left by Helene in western North Carolina, the local official in charge of elections in the Asheville area reassured citizens Monday that Buncombe County is prepared to move forward with voting in the 2024 election.

“Buncombe County will vote,” said Corinne Duncan, director of elections for the county. “All of our staff and board members are accounted for and, despite personal hardship, we’ve been organizing to make sure this community has a voice in choosing the people that represent us, both in good times and in tragedy.”

The county elections office doesn’t have running water, but it has power, and Duncan said the office would be open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. She encouraged volunteer poll workers to contact the office.

“Our office and equipment were spared. We’re working with our emergency team and the State Board of Elections to strategize and modify plans,” Duncan said. “We are assessing what voting locations are available.”

Early voting begins in North Carolina on October 17, and absentee by mail is happening now. Absentee voting is available to any North Carolinian but must be requested by October 29.

Milton strengthens into a Category 5 hurricane

Hurricane Milton is seen in this satellite image taken on Monday at 9:26 a.m. ET.

Hurricane Milton has strengthened into a Category 5 hurricane and now has winds of 160 mph.

The storm is in the middle of an exceptional bout of rapid intensification. It has strengthened by 70 mph since 1 a.m. CT Monday and by 95 mph in the last 24 hours.

The storm joins Hurricane Beryl as the second Category 5 hurricane of the season. Beryl maxed out as the?earliest Category 5?hurricane on record while in the Caribbean Sea in early July.

But Category 5’s are still exceptionally rare.

Only 40 hurricanes have gotten this powerful in the Atlantic on record, according to data from?NOAA. Before this season, only two Category 5 hurricanes roamed the basin in the 2020s: 2022’s?Ian?and 2023’s Lee.

As Hurricane Milton threatens the US, Helene could cost property owners more than $47 billion

Remnants of a home are seen following the passage of Hurricane Helene in Lake Lure, North Carolina, on October 2.

Even as Florida braces for another major hurricane, new estimates reveal Hurricane Helene caused up to $47.5 billion in losses for property owners.

Helene, a deadly Category 4 hurricane that made landfall on September 26, caused “widespread and devastating” flooding across Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Tennessee, according to data analytics firm CoreLogic.

And yet many residents in Helene’s path did not have flood insurance. CoreLogic estimates Helene caused between $20 billion and $30 billion of uninsured flood losses.

That dwarfs the firm’s estimate of between?$10.5 billion and $17.5 billion worth of uninsured wind and flood losses.

“A significant portion of the losses from this hurricane are likely to go uninsured, leaving the individual property owner responsible for paying for repairs,” CoreLogic wrote in an?update?on Friday.

All told, CoreLogic calculates that Hurricane Helene caused between $30.5 billion and $47.5 billion in total wind and flood losses across 16 states. The firm said it does not plan to issue another update, unless new developments warrant it.

The latest cost figures come as?Hurricane Milton barrels towards Florida, rapidly intensifying from a tropical storm to a dangerous Category 4 hurricane in the span of less than 20 hours.

Milton threatens to bring additional damage to the region, and further highlights the absence of flood insurance in areas that continue to face immense flooding threats.

Read the full story here.

Milton undergoes "extreme rapid intensification"

Maybe you’ve heard of rapid intensification, but what Milton is doing right now is so exceptional, it has smashed through another milestone: “extreme rapid intensification.”

Typical rapid intensification is a 35 mph increase in sustained winds within a 24 hour period, but “extreme rapid intensification” is reserved for storms that intensify by 58 mph in the same time period, according nonprofit research group Climate Central.

Nearly a quarter of rapidly intensifying storms hit this level, according to the group, but Milton has far and exceeded even “extreme rapid intensification.” The storm has strengthened by 90 mph in less than 24 hours, the third-fastest rate of any storm to roam the Atlantic since 1982.

Tampa struggles to remove debris from Hurricane Helene before Milton hits

Officials in Tampa, which was hit hard by Hurricane Helene, are racing to remove the household debris left by Helene, before those items are swept into the air by the force of Milton.

Tampa Mayor Jane Castor said the city’s biggest concern is removing the debris before it will become “flying objects when Milton comes to visit.”

Though contractors scheduled to remove the debris in trucks never showed up, Castor said she anticipates it will be cleared by Tuesday evening.

Castor added she is confident residents have gotten the message they need to evacuate.

“The Tampa Bay region was becoming somewhat complacent but Helene really woke everyone up,” Castor said.

The FEMA Director is expected in Tampa today to survey the damage from Helene, Castor said.

Over 150,000 customers?remain without power in western North Carolina

Contractors for Duke Energy rebuild destroyed electrical lines in Asheville, North Carolina, on October 4.

Over a week after Hurricane?Helene tore through western North Carolina, over 150,000 customers remain without power as authorities also work to find missing people, restore water and continue recovery efforts in the devastated region.

In Buncombe County, which includes Asheville and Black Mountain, nearly 43% of customers are still in the dark, along with almost 57% of customers in nearby Henderson County, according to?Poweroutage.com.

The small counties of Mitchell,?Yancey and Avery, heavily impacted by Helene,?also?show high percentages of outages,?with 64%, 57% and 45% of customers without power,?respectively.

Milton is now forecast to reach Category 5 strength

An extremely warm Gulf of Mexico fueling Milton’s ongoing?rapid intensification?is now expected to propel the hurricane into rare territory.

Milton has sustained winds of 155 mph, according to the National Hurricane Center. That’s just 2 mph away from a Category 5 hurricane, which the storm is now forecast to reach later today.

Previously, Milton was expected to max out as a powerful Category 4 storm but Gulf waters are acting like rocket fuel for the hurricane.

Once Milton hits Category 5, it’ll be the second Atlantic hurricane to do so this year. Beryl maxed out as the?earliest Category 5?hurricane on record while in the Caribbean Sea back in early July.

Only 40 hurricanes have gotten this powerful in the basin on record, according to data from?NOAA. Before this season, only two Category 5 hurricanes roamed the basin in the 2020s: 2022’s?Ian?and 2023’s Lee.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers to evacuate ahead of Hurricane Milton

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers are scheduled to evacuate Tampa on Tuesday morning, ahead of Hurricane Milton’s expected landfall on Florida’s Gulf Coast, the team announced Monday.

The Buccaneers will move?operations for the rest of week to New Orleans, where the team will prepare leading up to Sunday’s divisional game against the New Orleans Saints.

This comes as Gov. Ron DeSantis urged residents in the Tampa Bay Area to start preparing to leave their homes and heed evacuation orders. Milton is forecast to make landfall on Florida’s Gulf Coast as soon as Wednesday night.

Florida residents reassured federal assets are ready to respond to Milton

Facing a barrage of misinformation about the federal response to Hurricane Helene, residents in Hillsborough County, Florida, are being reassured they will not be forgotten as Hurricane Milton approaches.

People in two of Hillsborough County’s five evacuations zones are being told to leave and the fire chief is begging affected residents to pack up now.

“If you remain there, you could die,” Jason Dougherty said in a news conference Monday. “My men and women could die trying to rescue you. They are heroes, but please do not put them in that situation.”

Milton’s mind-boggling rapid intensification is nearly without precedent

Milton is already the third-fastest rapidly intensifying storm on record in the Atlantic, according to more than 40 years of data from the National Hurricane Center.

Milton’s wind speeds have increased by 90 mph in less than 24 hours, according to data from the National Hurricane Center.

The storm has nearly tripled the rapid intensification criteria of a?35 mph increase in wind speeds in 24 hours or less. Milton has rapidly intensified faster than any other storm in the Gulf of Mexico,?but this level of explosive strengthening is not without precedent in the Atlantic.?Only two hurricanes strengthened more than Milton in a 24-hour period: 2005’s Wilma and 2007’s Felix.

Hurricane Wilma holds the rapid intensification record for the Atlantic dating to 1982, NOAA’s John Kaplan told CNN last year. Wilma’s sustained winds increased by a staggering 110 mph in a 24-hour period while it moved over the western Caribbean Sea in October of 2005.

In 2007, Hurricane Felix rapidly intensified by 100 mph in 24 hours in the Caribbean.

Milton is the 13th named storm to form and the seventh to rapidly intensify in the Atlantic basin this season. Rapid intensification is becoming more likely as the world warms due to fossil fuel pollution and bodies of water get warmer and retain heat.

CNN’s Eric Zerkel contributed to this report.

Mandatory evacuation ordered in Sanibel, Florida -- barrier island cut off by Ian in 2022

The residents of Sanibel, on a barrier island along Florida’s west coast, face a mandatory evacuation order starting Tuesday night as Hurricane Milton approaches, city officials said.

Residents must be off the island by 10 p.m. Tuesday as first responders will likely have to discontinue service when severe winds kick in, officials said Monday. Anyone who stays should email their address and the names of everyone staying with them to city police.

Sanibel was isolated by Hurricane Ian in 2022, when the only access point to Florida’s mainland was ripped away by the storm.

Now, residents working to clean up from Hurricane Helene, which hit late last month, have to pivot to preparing for Milton. With schools closed, free child care is available Monday so families can fortify their properties and plan to get out, officials said.

WHAT HAPPENED IN 2022’s IAN:?Hurricane-ravaged Sanibel Island ‘is cut off from the world’

Tampa International Airport will halt operations early Tuesday as Hurricane Milton takes aim

Tampa International Airport will suspend all commercial and cargo operations at 9 a.m. Tuesday ahead of Hurricane Milton, the airport said Monday.

The airport will remain closed to the public until it can assess any damage after the storm, it said in a news release.

“Travelers are urged to heed emergency management advisories and pay close attention to public safety alerts,” the airport said.

After the airport reopens, “Please contact your airline for the latest flight information,” the airport said. “TPA will announce if flight operations are affected by the storm, but airlines are responsible for their schedules.”

Looking back to 1921, the last time a major hurricane destroyed the Tampa Bay Area

The Tampa Bay Area has not seen a major hurricane — Category 3 or higher — strike within 50 miles of the city of Tampa in more than 100 years. Hurricane Milton is looking to break the streak, as it threatens to bring in record-breaking storm surge and become a historic storm to hit Tampa Bay.

The last time a major hurricane hit Tampa Bay was October 25, 1921. The hurricane made landfall in Tarpon Springs and brought in a storm surge of up to 11 feet, killing eight people and destroying a significant number of buildings and infrastructure along the coast.

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Updated 1:17 AM EDT, Tue October 8, 2024
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Archival 1921 Tampa area hurricane
03:22 - Source: CNN

Much like Hurricane Milton exploded in strength to a Category 4 storm Monday morning, the 1921 Tarpon Springs hurricane also rapidly intensified to a Category 4 storm before weakening to a Category 3 as it made landfall. Areas in downtown Tampa and Tarpon Springs experienced the most intense flooding from storm surge.

The aftermath of the 1921 storm was devastating for communities across the Bay Area. Roofs were badly damaged, while windows were blown out of structures. Downed power poles and trees and scattered debris blocked roads, which hindered recovery efforts. The hurricane also destroyed crop fields, as the storm surge caused saltwater to infiltrate the soils, preventing crops from being able to grow for upcoming seasons.

Florida expects a mass exodus, but DeSantis says evacuees won't need to go far

As Florida braces for Milton, Florida emergency management officials are anticipating an exodus larger than the state has seen in seven years, when Hurricane Irma swept the state in 2017.

In that storm, evacuations were ordered for 54 of the state’s 67 counties, causing interstates to back up and some gas stations to run out of fuel as huge swaths of the state fled Irma’s path. About 6.5 million people evacuated,?according to a FEMA estimate.

By contrast, just five counties so far ordered evacuations ahead of Hurricane Milton, which are collectively home to about 3.5 million people, though Gov. Ron DeSantis in a news conference Monday said he anticipated a “flurry” of orders throughout the day Monday. Evacuation orders generally apply to residents along the coast and in low-lying, flood prone areas.

DeSantis urged residents to heed those orders, stressing they did not have to go far to find refuge.

Florida governor encourages western barrier island residents to evacuate

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks at a presser about Hurricane Milton in Tallahassee, Florida, on Monday, October 7.

As Hurricane Milton barrels through the Gulf of Mexico, Gov. Ron DeSantis encouraged people on the western coast of Florida to start preparing to leave their homes.

“All these barrier islands, all these areas that would be susceptible to this storm surge that’s up and down the west coast of Florida, you should assume that there’s going to be some form of evacuation that’s going to be issued by your county officials,” DeSantis said in a news conference Monday morning. “That is going to happen when you have the potential for storm surge of this magnitude.”

“You have time to execute your plan, but you’ve got to do it now,” said DeSantis.

Rain ahead of Milton increases the storm's flood threat

Wet weather tapping into the hurricane’s tropical moisture is already soaking the state before Milton’s heaviest rain, increasing the threat of dangerous flooding when the storm’s rain arrives Tuesday night.

Drenching showers and thunderstorms have dropped at least an inch of rain over much of the Florida Peninsula since Sunday morning. Totals have climbed higher for parts of South Florida with 2 to 4 inches in multiple locations. Rain is expected to continue through much of today, especially in South Florida.

Milton could drop widespread totals of 5 to 10 inches over the Florida Peninsula through the end of the week. Some areas near and north of where Milton ultimately tracks could record up to 15 inches of rain.

Totals could be slightly lower for parts of South Florida, but drenching rain early this week will still raise flood concerns. A level 2 of 4 risk of flooding rainfall is in place Tuesday for much of the Peninsula – including Miami, Orlando and Tampa – according to the Weather Prediction Center.

The risk ratchets up Wednesday with a large portion of the state and southeastern Georgia under a level 3 of 4 risk of flooding rainfall.

Very heavy rainfall ahead of Helene set up parts of the southern Appalachians for catastrophic flooding once the storm arrived.

Milton rapidly intensifies into a dangerous Category 4 hurricane

Milton is exploding in strength and is now a Category 4 hurricane packing sustained winds of 150 mph with higher gusts, according to the National Hurricane Center.

That’s an increase of 25 mph since an hour ago.

Florida?emergency?management?director?expects largest evacuation since 2017

Director?Kevin Guthrie speaks during a news conference on Sunday.

With Milton approaching, the?Florida?Division of?Emergency?Management?is preparing for the largest evacuation since 2017,?director?Kevin Guthrie said at a news conference Sunday.

“I urge Floridians to finalize your story preparations now, enact your plan,” Guthrie said at a news conference, adding he “highly” encouraged residents to evacuate.

State authorities are anticipating Milton — currently forecast to be a major hurricane when it makes landfall along?Florida’s west coast mid-week — could cause widespread power outages, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said.

“This is something that potentially would be greater power outages than what we just saw with Hurricane Helene,” DeSantis said, noting the state’s residents still have a couple of days to prepare.

Electrical crews will be staged across Florida so they can work to restore power as soon as Milton passes, DeSantis said, cautioning Floridians should not run generators in their homes if they lose power.

“That could be fatal,” the governor said.

"Don't gamble your lives," Hillsborough County sheriff tells residents ahead of Hurricane Milton

Hillsborough?County, which includes Tampa, will be calling for evacuations on Monday, the?county’s sheriff told CNN’s Jessica Dean on Sunday evening.

“We’ll start issuing those mandatory evacuations,” said Sheriff?Chad Chronister. “We want to give people at least 24 hours’ amount?of?time to get to that safe area.”

Those who are looking to ride out?Milton?need to heed the advice from?officials, Chronister warned.

“If you want to?gamble, there’s plenty?of?avenues to do that, but?don’t?gamble?with?you and?your?family’s?lives,” Chronister said. “Please take the necessary precautions and make sure that you relocate somewhere else.”

“We’re still recovering. We’re still healing from?Hurricane?Helene,” he added. “This isn’t a time to panic, it’s just a time to get prepared.”

"Write your name in permanent marker on your arm" Florida official warns?residents?who won't evacuate

Attorney General?Ashley Moody issued a stark warning to those who ignore evacuation orders.

Florida?leaders still working?to?respond?to?damages from Hurricane Helene issued emphatic pleas?to?Tampa-area?residents?Sunday?to?heed?evacuation?orders, as Hurricane?Milton?is expected?to?strengthen and hit the state’s western coast by mid-week.

“Everybody?standing up here wants?to?keep you alive,” US Sen. Rick Scott said, flanked by local and federal?officials. “Nobody?up here?can?save?your?life if you put?yourself?in?harm’s way.”

Officials expect storm surge, other flooding and high winds that knock out power, Scott said.

With some roads still flooded from Helene,?residents?can?expect a similar kind?of?storm surge from?Milton?– but this time with strong winds, Hillsborough County Sheriff Chad Chronister warned.

“I personally have never seen that type?of?devastation, and it was just mainly water,” Tampa Mayor Jane Castor said. “Now, it’s going?to?be water and wind.”

The sheriff’s?office is calling?in?400?to?500 additional personnel?to?help with?evacuation?and is placing amphibious vehicles around the county?in?case?water rescues are needed, Chronister said. He urged?residents?to?stock up?on?supplies and make an?evacuation?plan now.

To?those?who?plan?to?stay despite evacuation?orders, Attorney General?Ashley Moody delivered this stark message:

Officials are still “uncovering folks?on?the beach?who?thought they could stay there, and the storm surge got them,” she said, referring to Helene’s impact.

Residents?should also be?on?the lookout for price gouging – the illegal practice charging excessive prices?on?essential items during a state?of?emergency – Moody said.

“We’re looking at egregious price differences between 30 days?ago and right now,” she said, adding?officials have created an app residents?can use to?report?cases?of?price gouging.

Many people are still without cell phone service after Helene, Moody said, advising residents to buy a small AM radio and a couple?of?batteries.

“This is old tech, and it works best?in?times?of?disaster,” she said.

Florida deploying hundreds of feet of flood protection systems as it braces for storm surge

Milton?could cause greater?storm?surge?in the Tampa Bay area than?it?saw during Hurricane Helene, Gov. Ron DeSantis said in a news conference Sunday, describing efforts to deploy?hundreds?of feet?of?flood?protection?systems.

“If Tampa Bay’s on the dirty side?of?the?storm,?it’s likely to generate?storm?surge?in excess?of?what Helene did,” he said. “If the?storm?is further south and Tampa Bay is on the weak side?of?the?storm,?it?may be that the?storm?pulls water out?of?the Tampa Bay. So there’s a wide range?of?possibilities that can happen there.”

Nearly 400?feet?of?protection?systems?have already been sent to a fire station Hillsborough County so?it can continue operations. Additionally, the state is “currently coordinating another 1,800?feet?of?flood protection?systems?for?wastewater facilities, pump stations and a hospital in both Hillsborough and Manatee Counties,” the governor said.

Residents in low-lying areas?were urged to take “appropriate precautions” and remove electric vehicles?from?areas?prone to?storm?surge, since fires can be caused when EVs come in contact with salt water.

Schools?in?at?least?seven Florida districts will close Monday

Several Florida school districts have announced school closures for Monday ahead of Hurricane Milton making landfall, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis announced on Sunday.

According to DeSantis,?schools?in?DeSoto, Hillsboro, Lee, Manatee, Pasco, Pinellas and Sarasota Counties will be closed Monday, and more counties may be added to the list.

“You’re going to have potentially major power outages,” DeSantis said. “I think everybody understands this potentially could be really significant?in terms of the power outages, and likely exceeding what?we just saw for Hurricane Helene.”

DeSantis added Florida officials are coordinating 1,800 feet of flood protection systems for critical?infrastructure throughout Hillsborough and Manatee counties. State officials are also “actively fulfilling over 3,232 separate requests for flood protection devices,” he said.

Here’s why Milton is intensifying so fast

The Gulf of Mexico is record warm and acting like jet fuel for Milton since Saturday afternoon.

Milton was a tropical storm with 60 mph sustained winds on Sunday. Just 24 hours later, it’s a Category 3 hurricane with winds of 125 mph – more than doubling its strength in a single day.

Rapid intensification – when winds increase by at least 35 mph in 24 hours or less – is becoming more likely as the world warms due to fossil fuel pollution and bodies of water get warmer and retain their heat.

Water in the Gulf is warm both at and below the surface. The Gulf has been at or near record levels since at least August, according to data tracked by hurricane expert Brian McNoldy. Its heat fueled multiple periods of rapid intensification for Helene and boosted the hurricane to Category 4 status.

The storm’s small size is also playing a role.

Record storm surge forecast for Tampa area

Hurricane Milton is on a collision course with Florida’s Gulf Coast and could bring record storm surge to Tampa Bay just two weeks after Helene smashed records there and devastated the area.

The forecast storm surge into Tampa Bay from Milton is 8 to 12 feet. Even 8 feet would surpass the all-time record high water mark of 6 to 7 feet of storm surge set less than 2 weeks ago with the passage of Hurricane Helene.

The storm surge forecast hinges on where exactly Milton tracks as it makes landfall. A track through or just to the north of Tampa Bay would bring the high-end forecast to the area. A track to the south would temper some of the storm surge.

READ MORE:?Why coastal communities should fear storm surge

Debris left by Helene could make Milton more dangerous. Here's what it looks like in the storm's likely path

As Milton approaches Florida, many cities in its path are still littered with debris strewn by Hurricane Helene – piles of wood, steel and other materials that could become dangerous projectiles in Milton’s powerful winds and block the paths of emergency crews.

“You get hit with a major hurricane, what’s going to happen to that debris? It’s going to increase the damage dramatically,” Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said Sunday.

Crews in Florida are working around the clock to remove the debris ahead of Milton’s arrival. DeSantis has ordered all disaster management sites to remain open 24/7 and has directed state agencies to assist local clean-up efforts. More than 800 National Guard personnel have also been deployed for debris removal, but DeSantis said there would soon be up to 4,000 available.

Here’s what it looks like in Milton’s path:

Tampa Bay

Damaged home items are piled along a road in Clearwater, Florida.

Tampa could receive up to three months’ worth of rain as Milton hits, and crews there are working day and night to clear debris ahead of the storm’s arrival, Mayor Jane Castor told CNN.

The sheer volume of waste to be collected means some crews in the city of Clearwater are pulling up to 12-hour days, the city’s solid waste director, Kervin St. Aimie, told CNN affiliate Spectrum Bay News 9.

Pasco County

Workers remove debris along a road in Pasco County, Florida.

Just north of Tampa in Pasco County, officials have declared a local state of emergency and issued evacuation orders for flood-prone areas and residents living in mobile homes and RVs. Officials worry that the excess debris left by Helen will make it even more difficult for rescue crews to navigate blocked roads.

“With this storm, Milton, and the storm surge we’re going to get, the debris that we still have outstanding laying on the sides of the roads are going to cause issues. Fire rescue, sheriff’s office and first responders might not be able to navigate roads to come rescue you,” county emergency management director Andy Fossa said.

Anna Maria Island

A still from video captured by resident Jose Erbella shows debris lining the streets in Anna Maria Island, Florida.

Towering walls of debris flank the streets of Anna Maria Island – about 60 miles south of Tampa – and piles of jagged drywall, appliances, dressers, mattresses and broken beams are being stuffed into dumpsters, video recorded by resident Jose Erbella shows. Bulldozers are cruising the roads to help shovel debris, Erbella said.

“We have mountains and mountains of garbage,” Erbella told CNN on Sunday. “It seems like everyone’s ground?floor is now out on the street because of the last storm.”

CNN’s Dakin Andone, Melissa Alonso and Sarah Dewberry contributed to this report.

Milton strengthens again and is forecast to near Category 5 strength

Milton continues to rapidly intensify over the Gulf of Mexico and now has sustained winds of 125 mph with higher gusts. It remains a Category 3 hurricane for now but is expected to reach Category 4 strength by this afternoon.

Milton’s winds are forecast to max out at 155 mph overnight, which is just 2 mph shy of Category 5 strength.

Milton is a dangerous major hurricane. Here's where it's headed

Milton is a Category 3 hurricane raging in the Gulf of Mexico with 120 mph sustained winds. The hurricane is located about 180 miles west-northwest of Progreso, Mexico, and more than 700 miles west-southwest of Tampa, Florida, according to the National Hurricane Center.

Milton will continue to strengthen early this week and likely reach at least Category 4 status. The powerful hurricane will track just north of Mexico’s Yucatán Peninsula through Tuesday before turning more to the northeast and heading straight for Florida.

The hurricane will likely move into an area of slightly more hostile atmospheric conditions as it nears the Florida coast Wednesday, limiting some of its strength before landfall. However, Milton will still be a very dangerous hurricane as it hits the coast late Wednesday and tracks over the Peninsula into Thursday.

Milton will unleash torrential, flooding rainfall and powerful winds over the Yucatán Peninsula early this week and similar conditions could arrive in Florida as early as Tuesday night.

Hurricane Milton has exploded into a Category 3

Milton has exploded in strength in the Gulf of Mexico and is now a Category 3 major hurricane packing sustained winds of 120 mph with higher gusts, according to the National Hurricane Center.

The hurricane is forecast to reach at least Category 4 strength early this week as it tracks east across the Gulf toward Florida.