TAMPA, Fla. — The Gulf Coast, central, and some eastern parts of Florida are once again in recovery mode after Hurricane Milton made landfall late Wednesday night. While the damage has been extensive, it was not total, as many had feared, since Milton did not make landfall into Tampa Bay.
Throughout the week before Milton made landfall, officials from Governor Ron DeSantis (R) on down warned that while they were hoping for the hurricane to weaken from a Category 5, they were still expecting it to be a historically strong storm because the models had been having a hard time predicting what would happen.
With that in mind, here is what some of the state had in place, ready respond once the storm had passed:
- over 6,500 Florida National Guardsmen;
- nearly 200 Florida State Guardsmen;
- hundreds of land, air, and water vehicles to support the FNG and FSG;
- the Florida Department of Law Enforcement directing 500 out-of-state law enforcement officers;
- over 100 Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission officers;
- Florida Highway Patrol escorting fuel trucks to replenish depleted gas stations;
- over 50,000 linemen to restore power; and
- the Florida State Fire Marshal’s Office fielding 23 urban search-and-rescue teams and 10 swift water teams.
DeSantis made it clear that while the federal government and the Federal Emergency Management Agency were assisting the state in preparing for Hurricane Milton, his administration was the one running the show.
It took nearly a week for President Joe Biden to approve active-duty troops.
The same could not be said in North Carolina when Hurricane Helene hit the western part of the state.
It was clear the state and federal government were playing catch-up.
Flooding in the North Carolina mountains, while rare, is not without precedent. A hurricane that first hit South Carolina and then went north flooded Asheville and the surrounding areas in July 1916. Over 80 people died, and millions of dollars’ worth of damage was caused by the storm.
More recently, the Asheville area saw significant flooding in 2004 from Tropical Storms Ivan and Frances.
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