Weather

91 Dead From Helene Nationwide; Trump To Visit Valdosta

One of the hardest hit areas was the downstate city of Valdosta, but Atlanta saw records rains and flooding.

A damaged 100-year-old home is seen after an oak tree landed on it after Hurricane Helene moved through the area, Friday, Sept. 27, 2024, in Valdosta, Ga.
A damaged 100-year-old home is seen after an oak tree landed on it after Hurricane Helene moved through the area, Friday, Sept. 27, 2024, in Valdosta, Ga. (Mike Stewart/Associated Press )

GEORGIA — The number of people dead in the wake of Hurricane Helene’s treacherous path of destruction through the state had reached more than 20 as of Sunday, according to the Associated Press.

As of Sunday evening, there were 91 dead across several states, according to the Associated Press, and damage estimates sat at over $95 billion. Among Sunday's total were 30 people killed due to the storm in the North Carolina county that includes the mountain city of Asheville and several other fatalities reported in that state.

Former president and Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump announced Sunday he would visit Valdosta, one of the hardest hit areas in Georgia, to receive a briefing on the hurricane Monday.

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Among the dead in Georgia were a 27-year-old mother and her 1-month old twins, who died Friday when trees fell on their house in Thomson, just west of Augusta.

Vernon "Leon" Davis, a Pierce County firefighter, was killed when a tree fell on his car Friday in Blackshear, 11Alive reported. Additionally, a 7-year-old boy and a 4-year-old girl died in Washington County after a tree fell on their home and trapped them inside the burning house, Augusta television station WRDW reported.

Find out what's happening in Across Georgiafor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Rhonda Bell and her husband were spending a sleepless night in the downstairs bedroom of their century-old home just outside Valdosta, where Helene's center passed shortly after midnight.

The winds broke off limbs, tore away neighbors' roof shingles and knocked down fence panels in the neighborhood with train tracks along one edge. Then a towering oak tree crashed through the roof of an upstairs bedroom.

"I just felt the whole house shake," Bell said. "Thank God we're both alive to tell about it."

Valdosta resident Bill Parmelee told NBC News that Helene “sounded like a freight train”

“That wind was really howling,” he told the outlet. “As it would howl, then a tree would fall. Some of them fell in the yards. Some of them fell on the house.”

Vehicles snaked almost a mile around a gas station in Valdosta, according to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, which reported a woman and her daughters walked to the station with a gas can after passing five that had no fuel.

Valdosta State University canceled in-poerson classes for the week, the newspaper reported.

Further north, Atlanta was hit with 11 inches of rain, the heaviest 48-hour downfall since the city began keeping records in 1878.

Streets flooded, submerging cars. Firefighters rescued at least 20 people.

In the Buckhead neighborhood, boats rescued two adults and their baby, the athletic fields were submerged under about 4 feet of water at Westmisters Schools of Atlanta, and cars were abandoned partially underwater while homes and businesses flooded, according to the Journal-Constitution.

No injuries or deaths have been reported in Atlanta.

In Augusta, officials notified residents Sunday morning that water service would be shut off for 24 to 48 hours in the city and surrounding Richmond County.

A news release said trash and debris from the storm "blocked our ability to pump water.” Officials were distributing bottled water at the municipal building and said each household would receive one case.

The city was also under a curfew from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. as of Saturday, according to the Journal-Constitution.

Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator Deanne Criswell said Sunday the federal disaster agency is actively engaged across six states, meeting the requests of governors and state-level responders. The needs vary across the six states with active disaster declarations, Criswell said, and she confirmed that conditions in the Appalachian regions across North Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia presented particular concern.

Georgia was among 10 states still dealing with power outages Saturday in the wake of Helene. As of mid-day Sunday over 660,000 homes and businesses were still without power, according to poweroutage.us.

Georgia EMC, which represents 41 Georgia cooperatives that supply power to much of the state's rural areas, warned of “catastrophic” damage to utility infrastructure. The company said more than 100 high-voltage transmission lines had been damaged in the storm.

Helene came ashore in Florida's Big Bend region as a Category 4 hurricane late Thursday, packing winds of 140 mph before quickly moving through Georgia, the Carolinas and Tennessee. According to an Associated Press tally, the deaths occurred in Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia.

On Friday, the governor issued an order to allow the Georgia Department of Defense to deploy an additional 1,000 Georgia National Guard troops for storm response. Search and rescue teams from Maryland were also in the state to assist with recovery efforts, Kemp said.

President Joe Biden said he was praying for survivors, and the head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency headed to the area. The agency deployed more than 1,500 workers, and they helped with 400 rescues by late Friday morning.

Officials urged people who were trapped to call for rescuers and not tread floodwaters, warning they can be dangerous due to live wires, sewage, sharp objects and other debris.

The Associated Press contributed to this story.

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