The devastation in North Carolina from Hurricane Helene might feel far away, but for one brewery in Baltimore, it hits close to home.
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NEW HAVEN, Conn. (WTNH) In New Haven, you can now eat delicious pizza and even enjoy it as an art form. The new pizza capital monument is an ode to apizza and the latest piece of work from the New Haven Pizza Club. The 9,000-pound sculpture is now outside Modern Apizza on State Street, []
In Lancaster County, temperatures will reach a low of 38 degrees with patchy frost expected through 9 a.m., Friday, according to the National Weather Service.
Sheriff Keith Pearson from St. Lucie Co. speaks with CNN about Hurricane Milton’s aftermath on Thursday.
But it remains unclear if LaRuth Ensley will be returning to the Crozet middle school.
The Louisville Metro Housing Authority helps transition low-income families from renting to owning their own house.
As Hurricane Milton slammed the Florida coast, Newscenter 5 checked in on former Massachusetts residents who were bracing for the storm.Officials in Florida spent days urging residents to evacuate, before the Category 3 hurricane made landfall near Siesta Key on Wednesday night.Bobby Pero, a former resident of Beverly, Massachusetts, has seen his fair share of hurricanes since moving to Naples, Florida. However, this time he knew it would be much worse.”You just don’t know with hurricanes,” Pero said. “You gotta be smart be safe and do the right thing.”Former Massachusetts resident Steve Groh shared a similar perspective, as Hurricane Debbie nearly flooded his Clearwater, Florida home in August.”We’re pretty experienced with hurricanes here and we know when to leave and when not to leave,” Groh said.”This time, he evacuated, not taking any chances.”There was no question anymore, because this thing was going to build so big,” Groh said.Time-lapse video from his home shows Hurricane Milton already packing a punch.”I quite frankly think I’m going to be going home to a shell of a house,” Groh said.Former Newscenter 5 floor director Russ Wolfe, who now works in Tampa said while he helps keep his station on the air, he makes sure his wife is safe at home.”She’s safe secure. We have all the hurricane preparations. We got everything that we need,” Wolfe said.Michael Cody and his partner moved to St Petersburg, Florida from Everett, Massachusetts and bought their home with hurricanes in mind.”We’re 43 feet above sea level, we have a cinder block house, we have hurricane windows, we specifically bought this house for this exact reason,” Cody said.Cody said he could not evacuate because he is a county employee.”They need county employees to run the phone center, they need county employees to run the shelters,” Cody said.”It is definitely a difficult decision you have to think of. Is it worth leaving? How bad is it gonna be? Because you never really know until it happens.”In Punta Gorda, about an hour south of Sarasota, Charlene Machado placed all of her furniture up on tables standing on concrete blocks.”It’s taken us probably two or three days to prepare the house,” Machado said.Machado made the decision to evacuate at the last minute, abandoning her earlier plans to stay home through the storm. “This one’s a lot different. This one’s a very serious hurricane,” Kim Devolve said.Devolve lives in a newer home in Parrish, about 45 minutes northeast of Sarasota.”Everything is up to the latest and greatest hurricane standards in Florida, so we do feel safe,” Devolve said.However, the hurricane isn’t the only thing on Devolve’s mind, as multiple tornado sightings have been reported across Florida as an effect of the incoming storm system.This prompted Devolve to move motorcycle helmets into her closet just to be safe.”Say some prayers for anybody you know down here, and we’ll hunker down,” Devolve said.In Sarasota, Will Hall is staying with his family. Just weeks ago, their Tampa home was devastated by Hurricane Helene.”It’s nerve-wracking. I’ve got two kids, I’ve got a dog, my wife,” Hall said.”We’re kind of following all the good hurricane procedures to be safe if things get really bad, and we’re just hoping it all works out.”
Richmond are heavily involved in key trade talks with Shai Bolton and Liam Baker in the spotlight, but one key position player has signed on. Heres how day four of the AFLs trade period played out.
Hurricane Milton is set to slam Florida on Wednesday evening the second hurricane to strike in two weeks and the federal agency tasked with responding to disasters is once again positioning supplies and personnel where they’re needed and coordinating with state and local officials.The Federal Emergency Management Agency has faced rampant disinformation about its response to Hurricane Helene, which hit Florida on Sept. 26 before heading north and leaving a trail of destruction across six states.Critics allege the agency isn’t doing enough to help survivors, while false rumors circulating ahead of the presidential election include claims that people taking federal relief money could see their land seized or that FEMA is halting trucks full of supplies.Meanwhile, there’s also just a lot of confusion about what the agency does and doesn’t do when disaster strikes.Now, with Milton set to bring a life-threatening storm surge to the Tampa Bay region, many people are wondering whether they should see FEMA workers on the ground right away and what impact the agency is having if they don’t.Here’s a closer look at what the agency does during emergencies:What is FEMA’s role in a disaster?State or tribal governments can reach out to ask for federal assistance. But the disaster has to exceed their ability to respond, meaning that not all disasters end up getting federal help. The president approves disaster declarations.Once an emergency is declared like in the case of Milton and Helene that can unleash various types of aid from FEMA. Much of what FEMA does is give out money in the immediate aftermath of a disaster and for years to come.That can include assistance to individuals affected by disasters, such as payments of $750 to pay for their immediate needs like medicine or diapers after a storm or earthquake hits. It can also mean additional money to rent an apartment because their home is destroyed or to pay for a storage unit.In the wake of Hurricane Helene, FEMA so far has given out $344 million. But the agency has faced complaints in the past that the process is too bureaucratic.In hard-hit Asheville, North Carolina, Mayor Esther Manheimer said Wednesday that local officials had heard about people whose claims had been denied by FEMA and were working with the agency to solve the problem.”We will be meeting with our FEMA representatives here in Asheville and Buncombe County later today to discuss the number of denials and to secure a solution and get one in place as fast as possible,” she said.Another big part of FEMA’s disaster aid goes to public assistance. This is money to reimburse local governments for things like overtime for police or firefighters or to remove the mountains of debris left after storms.The agency also gives longer-term money to rebuild public infrastructure like schools, roads or libraries that are damaged by earthquakes or floods.Is FEMA in charge of every disaster?No. Experts and the agency stress that FEMA isn’t assuming control of Milton’s response. A lot of that falls to the state and affected communities.FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell, who led New York City’s Emergency Management Department before taking the top job at the federal agency, said FEMA’s role is to support the work of local emergency managers.”We do not come in and take over any response. I have been a local emergency manager. I know the steps that they are taking right now to prepare for this storm,” she said at a briefing Wednesday when she was heading from North Carolina to Florida.”Our role is to augment the incredible work that our local emergency managers, our first responders and our state partners are doing each and every day … and make sure that they have the resources that they need,” Criswell said.Craig Fugate, who was FEMA administrator during the Obama administration and before that was Florida’s director of emergency management, said FEMA really plays a supporting role in the initial response.”Disaster response belongs to the states, not the federal government,” Fugate said. In those emergency situations, it’s usually governors who are in charge, he said.Does FEMA send supplies or personnel?The agency sends water, tarps, food and staff. In an event like a hurricane when there’s time to prepare the agency coordinates with state and local officials about where to put those supplies before the storm arrives.For Milton, the agency says it has five staging bases where it stationed food and water ahead of time, including 20 million meals and 40 million liters of water.FEMA also has sent search and rescue teams and helps bring in expertise from across the federal government as needed. For example, two U.S. Army Corps of Engineers temporary power teams are in Florida to help with the Milton response. Other supplies have been brought in, like high-water vehicles from the Department of Defense as well as ambulances and helicopters.Ahead of Milton making landfall, the agency said it has 1,000 responders on the ground already. Many of them were there working on previous disasters and are pivoting to help with Milton.When asked about complaints that FEMA had not gotten to some areas of North Carolina hit by Helene, Criswell said Wednesday that just because residents don’t see someone in a FEMA shirt, that doesn’t mean the agency is not supporting them.For example, she said much of the water and food that is being delivered through the National Guard and other agencies comes from FEMA’s stockpiles.
Sheffield is transforming day by day. New homes are being built and regeneration projects are underway with cranes dotted across the citys skyline. It is an exciting time for our city.
Baxter International, a company responsible for 60% of the nation’s IV fluid supply, closed a plant in North Carolina that was impacted by Hurricane Helene.
Hurricane Milton pummeled Florida and caused life-threatening conditions. (CNN, WKMG, ACCUWEATHER, NOAA, SOCIAL MEDIA)