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The Latest: Helene's death toll rises to more than 130 as supplies are rushed to areas in need

Tropical Weather
September 30, 2024

A crisis unfolded in Asheville, North Carolina, as officials pledged to get more water, food and other supplies to flood-stricken areas without power and cellular service Monday, days after Hurricane Helene ripped across the U.S. Southeast. The death toll from the storm surpassed 130.

Georgia Governor Brian Kemp said during a news conference Monday that the death toll in that state had risen from 17 to 25. A North Carolina county that includes the mountain city of Asheville reported 40 killed there.

Follow APโ€™s coverage of tropical weather at https://apnews.com/hub/weather.

The Latest: Helene's death toll rises to more than 130 as supplies are rushed to areas in need
Tropical Weather

Hereโ€™s the latest:

North Carolina election officials announce voter guidance

State election officials in North Carolina are announcing guidance to voters after Hurricane Helene devastated counties in the western part of the state.

Counties without internet service will receive emergency kits the state Board of Elections is calling โ€œelection offices in a box.โ€ They will help local offices register voters and process absentee ballots until service is restored.

Voters in counties that are under a state or federal natural disaster declaration also will be exempted from North Carolinaโ€™s voter identification requirements. Those displaced by the storm can request an absentee ballot at their temporary home, although the board acknowledged that mail delivery is suspended at dozens of post offices in the hardest-hit regions.

Biden announces he will visit North Carolina later in the week

The Latest: Helene's death toll rises to more than 130 as supplies are rushed to areas in need
Tropical Weather

President Joe Biden said Monday he will travel to North Carolina on Wednesday to get a first-hand look at the devastation caused by Hurricane Helene.

Biden said he will travel to Raleigh to get a briefing from state and local officials and take an aerial tour of Asheville.

He announced plans for the travel following an operational briefing on the hurricane response and recovery efforts from federal government officials and North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, who took an aerial tour of the Asheville area on Monday.

Biden said he plans to visit hurricane-impacted communities in Georgia and Florida โ€œas soon as possible.โ€

Trump slams US response to Helene, even as supporters urge cutbacks to federal disaster agencies

The Latest: Helene's death toll rises to more than 130 as supplies are rushed to areas in need
Tropical Weather

Former President Donald Trump criticized the Biden administrationโ€™s response to the widespread devastation caused by Hurricane Helene, even as his supporters call for cuts to federal agencies that warn of weather disasters and deliver relief to hard-hit communities.

As president, Trump delayed disaster aid for hurricane-devastated Puerto Rico and diverted money from the Federal Emergency Management Agency in order to finance an effort to return undocumented migrants to Mexico. And Project 2025, backed by Trump supporters, would restructure FEMA to limit aid to states and says the National Weather Service, which provides crucial data on hurricanes and other storms, โ€œshould be broken up and downsized.โ€

Trump claimed without evidence Monday that the Biden administration and North Carolinaโ€™s Democratic governor were โ€œgoing out of their way to not help people in Republican areas.โ€

Biden has approved major disaster declarations for Florida, North Carolina and South Carolina, allowing survivors to access funds and resources to jumpstart their recovery immediately. FEMA and other federal agencies, along with private businesses and nonprofit and faith-based organizations, are responding to the disaster in at least seven states: Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama and Virginia.

Election workers in Georgia return to work amid the effects of Helene

The Latest: Helene's death toll rises to more than 130 as supplies are rushed to areas in need
Tropical Weather

Election employees across Georgia have returned to work even as some offices face power outages, limited internet and infrastructure damages.

โ€œIt appears that the counties were spared substantial, long term impacts,โ€ said Robert Sinners, the communications director for Georgiaโ€™s Secretary of State. โ€œIt looks like election offices are able to continue their work preparing for the upcoming election as scheduled.โ€

Absentee ballots are scheduled to go out on Oct. 7 as planned, Sinners said.

In Lowndes County, which is close to Florida, staff at the local board of elections are working off two computers instead of the usual eight, said election supervisor Deb Cox. The office is also without Wi-Fi and is using adaptors for the working computers.

โ€œWeโ€™re fully up and running as of this morning,โ€ said Cox. โ€œItโ€™s just slower than normal because we have less resources.โ€

Still, Cox said the office is on target to meet their election preparation goals on time. Poll worker training will resume Tuesday, and the office is continuing to send out electronic military ballots.

Even though Augusta is largely without power, four of Richmond countyโ€™s 11 election staff who work in person are still sorting through absentee ballot and voter registration applications. The power is on at the office and the internet is working, said Augusta Board of Elections Executive Director Travis Doss.

A Tennessee emergency official gives an update

Tennessee Emergency Management Agency Director Patrick Sheehan told reporters Monday that 14 state bridges are closed and five are destroyed due to the fatal flooding in the area.

The death toll in Tennessee remains at three confirmed deaths, but Sheehan said he expects that number to go up as emergency crews continue going through the wreckage.

Hospitals across the Southeast are scrambling to take care of patients after losing power

St. Lukeโ€™s Hospital in Columbus, North Carolina, has been operating via generator power for days. Still, the hospital has been receiving patients who were found in the mountains because its helipad is functional, marketing and public relations director Dean Graves said. All elective surgeries have been canceled until further notice, but the 25-bed hospitalโ€™s emergency room has been consistently full, he said.

โ€œWeโ€™re pretty close to capacity,โ€ Graves said. โ€œBut weโ€™re still here and weโ€™re doing the best we can.โ€

Elective surgeries also were canceled at South Georgia Medical Center in Valdosta, but there was no disruption in emergency services, said Erika Bennett, the hospitalโ€™s public information officer. All but one of the health systemโ€™s four hospitals have power again.

โ€œEverybody is just trying to rally,โ€ she said.

Ballad Health, which operates about a dozen hospitals in Tennessee, announced that elective surgeries would resume at capable facilities starting Monday. However, all services except emergency remain suspended at their Greeneville hospital in east Tennessee. Two more of the health systemโ€™s facilities โ€” Laughlin Healthcare Center and Unicoi County Hospital, where staff and patients were rescued from the hospital roof Friday due to flooding โ€” remain closed until further notice.

FEMA's administrator is on the ground in North Carolina

FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell was surveying damage with the North Carolina governor on Monday and will remain on the ground in North Carolina until the situation has stabilized, as directed by Biden, according to a FEMA news release.

Ten federal search and rescue teams were on the ground and another nine teams were on their way, for a total of more than 900 personnel supporting rescue efforts, the release said. One team was supporting the emergency department at an Asheville hospital and a second was heading to a Spruce Pine hospital while 200 federal ambulances were provided to the state.

FEMA provided 40 Starlink satellite systems to help with responder communications and others were being shipped to help restore communications infrastructure. One Starlink will be deployed per county Emergency Operations Center to assist with communications and continuity of government.

Two incident management assessment teams were working with the state to facilitate requests for assistance and additional personnel were arriving.

FEMA deployed 25 trailer-loads of meals and 60 trailers-loads of water to North Carolina and a C-17 cargo plane full of food, water and other commodities arrived in Asheville with a daily flow of commodities established via air bridge. Another 18 helicopters were on standby to help deliver additional commodities.

There were 29 shelters open with more than 1,000 occupants, FEMA said.

Pipeline that carries fuel to a Florida airport is expected to return to service

The pipeline carrying jet fuel to Orlando International Airport is expected to be returned to service later today, according to Vicky Oddi, spokesperson for pipeline operator Kinder Morgan.

The pipeline is currently not operating as a result of flooding from Hurricane Helene, she said. The Central Florida Pipeline is the sole source of pipeline-provided jet fuel to Orlando International Airport.

The airport has a reserve supply of approximately 10 days of jet fuel, according to the Port of Tampa. Kinder Morgan is working with its customers on any potential effects, Oddi said.

South Carolina mayor warns against spreading misinformation

Columbia, South Carolina, Mayor Daniel Rickenmann warned residents Monday not to spread rumors about the cityโ€™s infrastructure.

โ€œI ask our public, please verify the information before you share it,โ€ Rickenmann said. โ€œThere are a lot of rumors going around about our drinking water and all types of things that are creating panic, where people donโ€™t need panic. People are already suffering. They havenโ€™t had power in several days. Weโ€™re working together to resolve that. But please do not spread rumors. Please do not spread information that you have not verified. Youโ€™re doing more harm than good.โ€

A pipeline that supplies jet fuel to a Florida airport is down because of the storm

A pipeline that supplies jet fuel to Orlando International Airport is currently down as a result of Hurricane Helene and is expected to be back up and running this afternoon.

The airport has a reserve supply of approximately 10 days of jet fuel, according to the Port of Tampa. Operated by Kinder Morgan, the Central Florida Pipeline is the sole source of pipeline-provided jet fuel to the airport. Kinder Morgan and the airport didnโ€™t immediately respond to requests for comment.

Phone and internet outages continue to plague recovery from Helene

In Georgia, 11 counties either had 911 outages or were operating with state support, state Emergency Management and Homeland Security Agency Director Chris Stallings said Monday. That includes rural Emanuel County, where officials handed out an alternate phone number for people to report emergencies.

Stallings said 328 Verizon cell tower sites and 258 AT&T sites werenโ€™t fully operational, while cell service provider T-Mobile was also reporting a significant number of outages.

U.S. Rep. Rick Allen said communication outages meant people were having trouble finding out where to go for water and food.

โ€œThe biggest problem weโ€™ve had again is knowing where these sites are, knowing where thereโ€™s water and food, because communications are down, because we donโ€™t have internet,โ€ Allen said.

Local officials and community leaders meeting with Democratic U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock listed the restoration of cell service as one of their top priorities. But they also said aid wasn't flowing reliably to rural communities, which also need water, electricity and gasoline.

Biden talks about the disaster from the White House

Biden said Monday that the federal government will be with survivors and others in the nationโ€™s southeast affected by Helene for โ€œas long as it takes.โ€

Speaking from the White House, Biden said he expects to have to ask Congress for additional money to cover federal disaster assistance to those who lost their homes and businesses by the โ€œhistoricโ€ wind, rain and flooding event, but he doesnโ€™t yet know how much will be necessary to cover the damage.

โ€œWe know thereโ€™s more to do and weโ€™ll continue to surge resources including food, water, communications, and lifesaving equipment,โ€ Biden said. โ€œIโ€™m here to tell every single survivor in these impacted areas that we will be there with you as long as it takes.โ€

Biden defended his decision to spend the weekend at his Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, vacation home, rather than at the White House to monitor the storm, telling reporters, โ€œI was commanding. I was on the phone."

DeSantis says the federal government should focus on North Carolina

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said Biden called him Sunday, but he couldnโ€™t take the call because he was in a helicopter touring damage in the Big Bend area. But he told reporters Monday that the federal government should focus on North Carolina.

โ€œFlorida, we have it handled,โ€ DeSantis said. โ€œWe have what we need โ€ฆ Most of the effort should be in western North Carolina right now because you still have active rescues that need to take place.โ€

DeSantis said he's also sending rescue teams to North Carolina, where many Floridians have second homes.

โ€œWeโ€™re going to be bringing people to safety,โ€ he said. โ€œI donโ€™t think they have any major way to get out of those western North Carolina places right now. Thatโ€™s going to require us doing the air missions.โ€

DeSantis also touted Floridaโ€™s response back home and efforts to restore power and clear roads. He held a news conference in Steinhatchee in front of Royโ€™s restaurant, which was demolished by storm surge and said the state was issuing emergency permits to help businesses recover.

The situation in North Carolinaโ€™s Buncombe County

Officials in western North Carolinaโ€™s Buncombe County, where the city of Asheville is located, reported 35 deaths from the storm as of late Monday morning.

โ€œDevastation does not even begin to describe how we feel,โ€ Buncombe County Sheriff Quentin Miller said during a news conference.

Meanwhile, overnight shelters have been at capacity, drinkable water has been scarce and misinformation has been a problem, county officials said. There was a โ€œhoaxโ€ that a dam was in danger of failing, which prompted unnecessary evacuations of hundreds of people and diverted the attention of first responders.

โ€œPlease, please do not do not provide misinformation to our staff because this is delaying our response,โ€ Miller said.

The county plans to distribute food and water at locations that will be announced Monday afternoon, county officials said. And the city of Asheville has partnered with Verizon to establish a temporary satellite cell tower in a parking lot.

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