Pasco Sheriff's Office Responds To Widespread Flooding From Hurricane Helene

Over 1 Million Customer Power Outages Plague Florida In Wake Of Hurricane Helene

Pasco Sheriff's Office Responds To Widespread Flooding From Hurricane Helene
Pasco Sheriff’s Office Responds To Widespread Flooding From Hurricane Helene

Over a million customers across Florida are without power in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene’s devastating landfall late Thursday night.

As of early Friday morning, only Monroe County remains unaffected by outages, according to FindEnergy.com.

A staggering 1,154,615 homes are currently in the dark, with several counties experiencing particularly severe impacts.

Top 10 Counties With Outages:

CountyCustomers OutCustomers ServedUpdated
Pinellas County245,523570,61812:15 AM 9/27/2024
Hillsborough County86,109655,74712:15 AM 9/27/2024
Alachua County84,580136,17412:15 AM 9/27/2024
Pasco County70,071318,79312:15 AM 9/27/2024
Sarasota County53,191298,87812:15 AM 9/27/2024
Leon County57,285149,87212:15 AM 9/27/2024
Manatee County45,599260,48912:15 AM 9/27/2024
Marion County47,723225,30512:15 AM 9/27/2024
Lee County33,032503,53612:15 AM 9/27/2024
Citrus County23,32096,95212:15 AM 9/27/2024

Hurricane Helene slammed into Florida’s Big Bend region near Perry as a devastating Category 4 hurricane with sustained winds of 140 mph. This marks the strongest hurricane ever recorded to hit this area.

The hurricane is expected to continue unleashing a barrage of life-threatening conditions, including storm surge, flooding rainfall, and destructive winds, both near its landfall point and further inland.

Read: Pasco Sheriff’s Office Responds To Widespread Flooding From Hurricane Helene

As Helene tracks northward, it will maintain hurricane strength overnight as it moves into southern Georgia. However, it will gradually weaken as it races through the state, eventually reaching Tennessee by Friday afternoon, likely as a tropical storm.

The combination of Helene’s torrential rain and strong winds poses a serious risk for widespread power outages and flooding across the Southeast. This threat is heightened by the fact that the ground is already saturated from previous storms.

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