Helene continues deadly onslaught across Southeast as Atlanta sees first-ever Flash Flood Emergency
Deadly Tropical Storm Helene continues to unleash its fury across the Southeast, dumping torrential rain across the region prompting the first-ever Flash Flood Emergency for Atlanta. The monster storm made landfall along Florida’s Big Bend region late Thursday night as a major Category 4 hurricane.
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – The remnants of Helene continued its onslaught across the Southeast on Friday, with nearly 4 dozen people dead across multiple states and several others trapped in rubble after the storm made landfall in Florida’s Big Bend region late Thursday night as a monster Category 4 hurricane with winds of 140 mph.
At least 41 deaths have been reported so far, including 11 in Georgia, eight in Florida, two in North Carolina,19 in South Carolina and one in Virginia.
TRACKING HELENE: LIVE MAPS, POWER OUTAGES, WIND PROJECTIONS AND MORE
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Major damage from storm surge flooding is seen after Hurricane Helene in Steinhatchee, Florida, on Friday, Sept. 27, 2024. ()
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Major damage from storm surge flooding is seen after Hurricane Helene in Steinhatchee, Florida, on Friday, Sept. 27, 2024. ()
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Major damage from storm surge flooding is seen after Hurricane Helene in Steinhatchee, Florida, on Friday, Sept. 27, 2024. ()
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Major damage from storm surge flooding is seen after Hurricane Helene in Steinhatchee, Florida, on Friday, Sept. 27, 2024. ()
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Major damage from storm surge flooding is seen after Hurricane Helene in Steinhatchee, Florida, on Friday, Sept. 27, 2024. ()
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Major damage from storm surge flooding is seen after Hurricane Helene in Steinhatchee, Florida, on Friday, Sept. 27, 2024. ()
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Major damage from storm surge flooding is seen after Hurricane Helene in Steinhatchee, Florida, on Friday, Sept. 27, 2024. ()
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Major damage from storm surge flooding is seen after Hurricane Helene in Steinhatchee, Florida, on Friday, Sept. 27, 2024. ()
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Charles Starling, a lineman with Team Fishel, is pelted with rain as he walks by a row of electrical line trucks staged in a field in The Villages, Florida, on Thursday, Sept. 26, 2024. Thousands of the trucks are staged by Duke Energy in preparation for damage from Hurricane Helene. (Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel/Tribune News Service via Getty Images) ()
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TALLAHASSEE, FL - SEPTEMBER 26 An emergency shelter for Hurricane Helene was set-up at Leon High School in Tallahassee, FL, on Thursday, September 26, 2024. (Ted Richardson/For The Washington Post via Getty Images) ()
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GULFPORT, FL - SEPTEMBER 26: A man crosses a storm surge flooded area on the coast of Gulfport, Fla. as Hurricane Helene passed through the Gulf of Mexico to the West on September 26, 2024. (Photo by Thomas Simonetti for The Washington Post via Getty Images) ()
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ST PETE BEACH, FLORIDA - SEPTEMBER 26: Waves from the Gulf of Mexico crash on shore as Hurricane Helene churns offshore on September 26, 2024 in St. Pete Beach, Florida. Later today, Helene is forecast to become a major hurricane, bringing the potential for deadly storm surges, flooding rain, and destructive hurricane-force winds along parts of the Florida West Coast. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images) ()
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ST. PETERSBURG, FLORIDA - SEPTEMBER 26: Tanner Flynn stands in shallow water near crashing waves as Hurricane Helene passes offshore on September 26, 2024, in St. Petersburg, Florida. Helene is forecast to become a major hurricane, bringing the potential for deadly storm surges, flooding rain, and destructive hurricane-force winds along parts of the Florida West Coast. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images) ()
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ST PETERSBURG, FLORIDA - SEPTEMBER 2: A capsized boat washes ashore as Hurricane Helene churns offshore on September 26, 2024 in St. Peteersburg Florida. Already a Category 3 storm, Helene was expected to gain further strength before making landfall this evening on Florida’s northwestern coast. Flash flood warnings extend to northern Georgia and western North Carolina. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images) ()
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Water rescues were ongoing Friday morning at Peachtree Corners Apartments in Buckhead, Georgia, as floodwaters caused by drenching rains have risen from Hurricane Helene's arrival in metro Atlanta. ()
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This image shows flooding in Haywood County, North Carolina. (@HaywoodCountyES/X)
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This image shows a water rescue due to Helene in Pasco County, Florida. (@PascoSheriff/X)
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This photo shows a sinkhole in Chamblee, Georgia. (@ChambleeGA/X)
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This photo shows flooding in Sandy Springs, Georgia, due to the torrential rain from Hurricane Helene. (@SandySpringsGA/X)
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Storm surge flooding in Port Charlotte, Florida (Port Charlotte, Florida)
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Storm Surge flooding in Treasure Island, Florida from Hurricane Helene on Sept. 26, 2024. (City Of Treasure Island, Florida)
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Storm Surge flooding in Treasure Island, Florida from Hurricane Helene on Sept. 26, 2024. (City Of Treasure Island, Florida)
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Storm surge from Hurricane Helene in Bradenton, Florida (Bradenton, Florida Police Department)
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Storm surge from Hurricane Helene in Bradenton, Florida (Bradenton, Florida Police Department)
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Storm surge from Hurricane Helene in Tampa, Florida (Tampa Police Department)
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Storm surge from Hurricane Helene in Tampa, Florida (Tampa Police Department)
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Flooding in Lee County, Florida (Carmine Marceno, Lee County, Florida)
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Coastal flooding in St. Petersburg, Florida from Hurricane Helene. ()
In Blackshear, Georgia, a part-time assistant fire chief was killed when a tree fell onto his vehicle while responding to the storm.
"When we ask people to stay off the roads and be patient, it’s because when we are trying to get to people, it is a very dangerous environment and one of our finest has lost his life trying to save others," Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp said Friday.
'Never seen anything like it:' Mike Seidel is hammered by Hurricane Helene's eyewall as Category 4 storm makes landfall in Florida
FOX Weather's Mike Seidel is in Perry, Florida, where he says the amount of power flashes from Hurricane Helene is unlike anything he's ever seen.
Other deaths illustrated the power of hurricanes to kill by a variety of means. Two people in Georgia were killed during a tornado. At least two drowned in Florida. Multiple others were killed when trees fell onto their homes. One was killed on a Florida interstate by a falling highway sign. In North Carolina, a 4-year-old child died in a weather-related car crash.
Kemp warned there are still many who remain in peril. In Valdosta, officials have identified 115 structures heavily damaged by Helene that they know have multiple people trapped inside.

Hurricane Helene damage in Valdosta, Georgia
"(We are) trying to get to multiple structures that we know have individuals inside that we are unable to communicate with," Kemp said. "We’re going to have to literally cut our way into situations like this."
FIRST-EVER FLASH FLOOD EMERGENCY ISSUED IN ATLANTA AS HELENE'S FURY PROMPTS WATER RESCUES, RISING DEATH TOLL
Watch: Storm surge closes in on elevated camera in Cedar Key, Florida
Hurricane Helene brought several feet of storm surge to Florida, including to this neighborhood in Cedar Key.
Helene made landfall about 10 miles west-southwest of Perry, Florida, at 11:10 p.m. ET Thursday, with wind gusts in Florida and southern Georgia clocked as high as 100 mph. Impacts have been felt across the Southeast and into portions of the mid-Atlantic as the monster storm pushes farther inland.
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Boats piled against Florida homes after Helene
Video from Treasure Island, Florida, shows boats tossed around like toys by the fury of Helene, leaving them piled against homes.
Helene's winds weakened to tropical storm levels as it moved well into Georgia, but its onslaught of torrential rains led to extreme and catastrophic flooding.
Twenty-five Flash Flood Emergencies – the most dire flood alert issued by the NWS – were spread across Georgia, western North Carolina from Asheville to the Charlotte area, and portions of South Carolina and Virginia. That included the first-ever Flash Flood Emergency in Atlanta, where the city broke a 138-year-old record for two-day rainfall at 11.18 inches. The 25 Flash Flood Emergencies issued Friday is the most in a single day across the country.
VIDEOS: HURRICANE HELENE PRODUCES RECORD STORM SURGE ALONG FLORIDA'S GULF COAST
In North Carolina, record rains have flooded the Broad River to levels that have overtopped the Lake Lure Dam, threatening its failure. Officials have issued emergency evacuation orders downstream concerned about deadly flash flooding. As much as as 20 inches of rain could fall in the area by the end of the weekend.
The Asheville Fire Department said on X that a mandatory evacuation of the Swannanoa River Valley was underway because of the flooding. According to a post on X from Haywood County Emergency Services, residents in portions of Waynesville, North Carolina, were told to evacuate because of the potentially deadly situation that's unfolding.
The North Carolina Department of Transportation warned driver "all roads in Western North Carolina should be considered closed" and part of I-40 was washed out near the Tennessee-North Carolina.
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Hundreds of water rescues take place in Florida, Georgia
Water rescues ongoing at flooded Atlanta apartment complex from Helene's relentless rains
Water rescues were ongoing Friday morning at Peachtree Corners Apartments in Buckhead, Georgia, as flood waters caused by drenching rains have risen from Hurricane Helene's arrival in metro Atlanta.
Countless emergency crews from Florida to Georgia are responding to those trapped in homes and cars as rivers and streams swell.
The Pasco County Sheriff’s Office in Florida reports first responders have so far responded to more than 200 water rescue calls and have rescued at least 65 people with additional water rescues ongoing.
FLORIDA POLICE GIVE MORBID ADVICE TO THOSE WHO DIDN'T EVACUATE FOR HELEN'S HISTORIC STORM SURGE
Infant, mother rescued from flooding in Atlanta live on FOX Weather
A woman carrying an infant strapped to her chest was rescued live on FOX Weather early Friday morning after numerous rivers and streams in the Atlanta area overflowed their banks due to the torrential rain from deadly Tropical Storm Helene.
Atlanta Fire Rescue Department has responded to numerous weather-related calls overnight.
Several boats were deployed to transport people andpetstosafety, while some residents were forced to wade through deep water to reach rescue crews.
FOX Weather cameras were rolling when several of those rescues were underway, and the video shows a woman with a baby strapped to her chest being led from the water.
WATCH: FOX WEATHER METEOROLOGIST RESCUES WOMAN FROM RUSHING FLOODWATERS IN ATLANTA
FOX Weather's Bob Van Dillen rescues woman from Atlanta floodwater
FOX Weather Meteorologist Bob Van Dillen bravely rescued a woman who had driven into floodwaters in Atlanta early Friday morning. Carrying her on his back through chest-deep water, watch as Van Dillen, a towering 6-foot, 1-inch man, demonstrated incredible strength and courage during Hurricane Helene coverage.
FOX Weather Meteorologist Bob Van Dillen found himself in the middle of a harrowing rescue as Helene slammed the Atlanta area. While covering the storm's aftermath, Van Dillen, a journalist from the area, heard a woman's desperate cries for help along Peach Tree Creek. She had driven into floodwaters and was trapped in her car before sunrise.
Van Dillen waded into the chest-deep water, battling strong currents to reach the woman. He pulled her to safety, carrying her through the floodwaters to a nearby dry area.
Over 4 million without power across the Southeast as Helene’s winds batter region
Helene's combination of 70-100 mph wind gusts with saturated grounds left more than 4 million without power across the Southeast as of Friday afternoon, with Florida, Georgia and South Carolina all reporting over a million customers with outages at one point during the storm.
In Florida, Helene produced a 99-mph gust in Perry, a 75-mph gust near Jacksonville and a 72-mph gust at Jacksonville International Airport. In neighboring Georgia, a gust reached 100 mph in Alma, while an 88-mph wind gust was reported in Valdosta and a 75-mph gust in Savannah.
15-foot storm surge submerges Florida's Big Bend
Treasure Island battles for recovery after Hurricane Helene's destructive storm surge
An aerial view of Treasure Island, Florida, at first light post-Hurricane Helene paints a stark picture of devastation on Friday.
The massive size of Helene combined with its Category 4 strength and forward speed, racing up the Gulf of Mexico at over 20 mph led to a massive storm surge along the Big Bend and Florida's northern Gulf Coast.
According to NOAA, preliminary indications show storm surge reached at least 15 feet along the Big Bend region near Keaton Beach, Steinhatchee and Horseshoe Beach. A camera in Cedar Key, Florida, at a height of 6 feet, was swamped by storm surge early Friday morning. Surge levels eventually reached 10 feet.
Hurricane Helene makes landfall between Tampa and Tallahassee
Hurricane Helene made landfall southeast of Tallahassee, Florida as a Category 4 hurricane on Thursday evening.
Clearwater Beach reported its highest surge since at least the Superstorm of 1993, with a level of nearly 7 feet.
Storm surge even brought floodwaters into Tampa, where gauges near the water showed a surge of more than 6 feet.
Extensive flood damage seen in coastal Tampa neighborhoods following Helene
Tampa Mayor Jane Castor reported extensive damage on Davis Islands and other waterfront areas of the city on Friday morning, as Hurricane Helene slammed Florida on Thursday night.
Tampa Mayor Jane Castor reported "extensive damage" across the city, including Davis Islands and other waterfront areas. Footage taken from a Tampa Police Department helicopter showed flooded residential roads.
In Treasure Island, storm surge inundated homes, businesses and infrastructure on the barrier island in Pinellas County.
As the sun rose Friday morning, authorities assessed the damage, as boats, once safely moored in the marina, were deposited on people's front lawns.