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ABC10 first reported in July about problems coming from a Fair Oaks based company aimed at selling tiny homes, or ADUs, to people looking to expand.
THE AREA FOR AS LONG AS THEYRE NEEDED. SAMARITANS PURSE, A CHRISTIAN RELIEF GROUP BASED IN BOONE, IS ASSISTING FAMILIES IN NEED AS THEY DEAL WITH THE STORMS AFTERMATH IN THEIR OWN BACKYARD. RIGHT NOW, THEY ARE FOCUSED ON GETTING FAMILIES BACK INTO THEIR HOMES. THAT INCLUDES CUTTING TREES AND CLEARING OUT DEBRIS TO CLEANING OUT ITEMS THAT WERE DAMAGED BY HELENE. HUNDREDS OF VOLUNTEERS AROUND THE COUNTRY ARE EXPECTED TO COME HELP IN THE NEXT FEW WEEKS. A LOT OF PEOPLE STILL WITHOUT POWER, EVEN OUR OWN STAFF HERE IN IN BOONE AND THE SURROUNDING AREAS ARE STILL TRYING TO DIG OUT FROM A LOT OF THE ROADS THAT ARE MESSED UP, BUT ALSO POWER AND NO WATER AND BUT WE ARE. WERE QUICKLY ADJUSTING AND AND WERE ABLE TO START PROVIDING ELP TO THE COMMUNITY AS SOON AS POSSIBLE. SAMARITANS PURSE HAS SET UP A RESPONSE CENTER IN ASHEVILLE. ITS LOCATED AT THE BIL
In 2005, Hurricane Dennis landed near the Alabama-Florida state line as a Category 3 hurricane. Far to the east, Florida’s Big Bend where Hurricane Helene came ashore on Thursday night never even felt tropical storm-strength winds, but it was still hit with a mass of water in 2005 that devasted coastal communities.That’s storm surge. It’s more deadly and destructive than wind and can make a significant impact far from the center of a storm.Related video above: FEMA prepares to respond to dangerous storm surge, flash flooding in Hurricane Helene’s aftermathThe most common way to measure a hurricane’s strength is the Saffir-Simpson Scale, which assigns a category from 1 to 5 based on a storm’s sustained wind speed at its center, with 5 being the strongest. But that only tells part of the story.While wind can tear off roofs, knock down trees and snap power lines, storm surge can push buildings completely off their foundations, can trap and even drown people in their homes, wash out roads and bridges, toss boats inland and hammer anything in its path.”The leading cause of death from hurricanes is water, not wind,” said Craig Fugate, the former director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency who previously ran Florida’s emergency management.And in the case of Hurricane Helene, experts were predicting that the storm surge would be devastating in the coastal areas of the state’s Big Bend, where the peninsula meets the Panhandle.Flooding along Florida’s coast began well before Hurricane Helene made landfall, with rapidly rising waters reported from as far south as Fort Myers on the state’s Gulf Coast.Early Friday, sheriff’s officials in Hillsborough County, where Tampa is located, were using a large ATV to rescue people who were stranded by rising waters.Video below: Tampa bridge rocked by Helene’s whipping winds, storm surge In Cedar Key, an old Florida-style island off the Gulf Coast, many homes, motels and businesses were flooded. Not even the city’s fire rescue building was spared.”It actually blew out the storm panels on the front doors. Blew out one of the breakaway walls on the back and two entry doors, the agency posted online. It appears that we had about 6 feet or better of water inside. Storm surge is the level at which sea water rises above its normal level. Much like the way a storm’s sustained winds do not include the potential for even stronger gusts, storm surge doesn’t include the wave height above the mean water level. Surge is also the amount above what the normal tide is at a time, so a 15-foot storm surge at high tide can be far more devastating than the same surge at low tide. Hurricane Katrina is largely remembered for causing flooding in New Orleans. That wasn’t from storm surge, but rather the failure of levees protecting the city. But further east, Mississippi was devastated by up to 28 feet of surge. Afterward, parts of the Mississippi coast looked as if someone took heavy equipment and cleared out everything within 300 yards of the shore, Fugate said.”It took the gambling casino boats and put them on the other side of the road. The Waffle Houses were nothing but slabs,” Fugate said. “That kind of devastation is what they’re going to see in the Big Bend.’Florida’s Big Bend is sparsely populated compared to other parts of Florida’s coast. “Fortunately, the populations are much smaller, but it doesn’t mean the devastation to those areas won’t be extreme. I’m thinking about little towns like Panacea. I’m not sure what’s going to be left after this,” Fugate said. The Gulf Coast overall is much shallower than the Atlantic Coast, and even more so in the Big Bend. If you place a fan in front of a shallow baking tray filled with water, it’s going to scatter it much more easily on the kitchen counter than if you put a deep mixing bowl full of water in front of the same fan.And because of the geography of the Big Bend, the water can’t spread out along the coast as it would in other areas.”That is very shallow water. Because of the bend, there’s nowhere for the water really to go. It just piles up and moves inland,” Fugate said. “If people haven’t gotten out, it’s going to be bad.”Video below: Intense storm surge in Pinellas County as Hurricane Helene crawls north through Gulf of MexicoFugate noted many of the coastal communities in the area have one road in and out, and once those roads are flooded, people who don’t evacuate will be stuck until the storm passes and flooding recedes.”Most of the roads down there are going to be underwater, even if (first responders) could, they’re not going to get down there,” Fugate said. “During the storm, there won’t be anybody able to get out there and rescue people.”
Women in STEM fields gathered on Thursday at Deerfield Golf Club for an inspirational conference that prepared them for easier conversations.
The program is paid for by a mandatory payroll tax and it also provides long-term health services such as nursing home care and home health care.
LAST CENTURY. ALL RIGHT. HAPPENING RIGHT NOW. NEW ORLEANS AREA NONPROFIT. STAND AT THE READY TO ASSIST WITH RECOVERY FROM THE STORM. VOLUNTEERS HERE AT HOME WILL DEPLOY TO AREAS HARD HIT BY HELENE. WDSU REPORTER ELIZABETH KUEBEL IS LIVE WITH A LOOK AT THEIR EFFORTS THAT ARE UNDERWAY TO HELP NEIGHBORS IN NEED. ELIZABETH. EXACTLY. STELLA. THIS NONPROFIT HAS THEIR MID-CITY WAREHOUSE PACKED WITH TRUCKS RIGHT NOW THAT ARE READY TO ROLL OUT WHEN AND WHEREVER THEY ARE NEEDED MOST. AS ANOTHER NONPROFIT IS HEADING TO FLORIDA TOMORROW MORNING. LOADING UP LADDERS AND STACKING SUPPLIES, TEAM MEMBERS FROM LOCAL NONPROFIT SBP, WHICH WAS BORN IN THE AFTERMATH OF KATRINA. THEIR MID-CITY WAREHOUSE GETTING EVERYTHING READY TO HELP REBUILD HOMES HIT BY HELENE. LOADING UP VEHICLES, GASSING THEM UP, MAKING SURE THAT THEYRE GOOD TO GO. WERE GOING TO WATCH THE STORM BEAR THROUGH THIS EVENING INTO TOMORROW, AND VERIFY THAT WELL BE ABLE TO GET INTO THE TALLAHASSEE AREA AND AT THAT POINT, GREEN LIGHT THE TEAM WILL DEPLOY AND LINK UP WITH OUR PANAMA CITY TEAM TO TO REALLY START THAT ASSESSMENT IN FORCE. MAYBE FOOD AND THEYRE NOT ALONE. ANOTHER NONPROFIT, ONE VOICE NOLA, BASED IN BELLE CHASSE, IS ALSO SPENDING THE DAY PREPARING AND PLANNING. SO WE HAVE OUR OVENS THAT GO OUT. THEYLL COOK HOT MEALS FOR HUNDREDS OF PEOPLE IN THE STRIKE ZONE. WILL FRY, BAKE. WE HAVE BIG POTS FOR JAMBALAYA. WE TRY TO TAKE NEW ORLEANS TO THEM. BOTH ORGANIZATIONS, LIKE ALL OF US AT HOME, ARE NO STRANGER TO HURRICANES AND THE HEARTACHE THEY CAN BRING. TO BE ABLE TO SHARE A WARM MEAL WITH THEM AND SHARE HOPE WITH THEM AND JUST TELL THEM THAT EVERYTHING IS GOING TO BE OKAY AND THAT WE SEE YOU. WERE HERE FOR YOU. I LOVE IT. OUR EXPERIENCED AS NEW ORLEANIANS, AS AN ENTITY THAT HAS LIVED THROUGH SO MANY OF THESE DISASTERS, WE HAVE SOMETHING TO PAY FORWARD AND THIS IS GOING TO BE OUR OPPORTUNITY TO ONCE AGAIN SHOW UP FOR A COMMUNITY THAT DIDNT ASK FOR THIS LAST ONE. MANY INDIVIDUALS THAT DID EVERYTHING RIGHT AND SHARED THEIR PROPERTY, BUILT IT THE RIGHT WAY, AND YET STILL ARE GOING TO BE HURT. OKAY. AND AGAIN, HERE AT SBP, THEY ARE READY TO HEAD OUT AS SOON AS TOMORROW. REPORTING LIVE IN MID-CITY. I
The hospitality industry and 3D printing technology are converging in a West Texas desert, building what is being called the worlds first 3D-printed hotel. An industrial-size printer is extruding layer after layer of a concrete mixture to form the walls of the hotels first two model units. The plan is to expand El Cosmico, a 21-acre hotel and campground, by 40 extra acres to include 43 hotel units and 18 residential homes 3D-printed by ICON, a Texas-based company. El Cosmico owner and hotelier Liz Lambert said the technology allows for unbridled creativity in construction. Most hotels are contained within four walls and a lot of times you are building the same unit over and over and over again, Lambert said. Ive never been able to build with such little constraint and such fluidity and just the curves and the domes and the parabolas. Its a crazy way to build.
The news comes less than a year after Yelloh made significant cuts to its workforce and physical footprint across the country.
Prime Minister links attacks on policemen to criticism of the police force
Its been notoriously difficult to secure a liquor license in state-controlled Pennsylvania, but a small group of business owners, sommeliers, and winemakers have led the charge to help the citys wine scene to finally flourish in line with its celebrated restaurants. These are the best wine bars in Philadelphia.