Hurricane Milton moves away from Florida as a Cat. 1 storm but still threatening floods, powerful winds as 3M without power

Hurricane Milton churned away from Florida early Thursday as a downgraded Category 1 storm — with those who stayed behind waking to survey the damage as 3 million remain without power and at least two people were killed in tornadoes.Milton was centered off the state’s Atlantic coastline about 10 miles northeast of Cape Canaveral early Thursday morning with maximum sustained winds of about 85mph — a far cry from the powerful 120 mph gusts that rocked Florida’s Gulf Coast when the then-Category 3 storm made landfall in Siesta Key, a barrier island town off Sarasota, around 8:30 p.m.Wednesday.

The storm brought chaos and destruction to much of Florida’s Gulf Coast, with wind gusts exceeding 100 mph and 13-foot storm surges inundating some communities, leaving over 3 million homes and businesses without power still Thursday morning, according to PowerOutages.us.The damaging storm ripped roofs off of buildings, including at Tropicana Field, home to the Tampa Bay Rays, and about a dozen devastating tornadoes spawned in its wake, killing at least two people in a retirement community in Fort Pierce, officials said.Thankfully, however, officials in hard-hit Sarasota and Tampa Bay said the storm’s impact was not as bad as they had feared.

“We’ll have storm surge damage but nothing like it could have been.It could have been catastrophic for Tampa Bay,” Mayor Jane Castor said Thursday.

Similarly, Sarasota Mayor Liz Alpert told MSNBC the storm’s impact was not as bad on the mainland as expected, but that authorities still had to assess the Barrier Islands.While there were plenty of power outages, there were no emergency calls from residents, Alpert added.

“That’s really unusual.Nobody called for a rescue.

So my sense is they must have evacuated,” she said.Milton held onto hurricane status as it crossed the Florida peninsula overnight, and was churning northeast at about 18 mph as it headed away from Florida the National Hurricane Center said in an...

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Publisher: New York Post

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