The storm is forecast to make landfall near Tampa on Wednesday evening and could become the worst storm to hit the area in about 100 years, the National Hurricane Center (NHC) warned earlier this week.
Hurricane, tropical storm, and storm surge warnings have been issued for much of the Florida Gulf Coast.
Outside the forecast zone, “damaging winds, life-threatening storm surge, and heavy rainfall” can be expected, the NHC warned.
‘Not Survivable’
An official in Pinellas County, Florida, said the storm surge will likely cause the deaths of people who stick around.“This is not survivable,” Pinellas County Emergency Management Director Cathie Perkins told a news conference. “This is the ocean coming into your living room. This is fast-rising water with a lot of pressure behind it.”
“Don’t think that you’re going to be able to ride that out. Don’t think you’re going to be able to protect your building. It’s going to be pushing against the walls of your structure for hours and hours. This is why we need you to go.”
Tampa Mayor Jane Castor provided a more stark warning on people who don’t leave evacuation zones ahead of the storm.
“Do whatever you need to do and then get out of the evacuation zones which now are evacuation zones A and B, and as we all have heard so many times now, you hide from the wind and run from the water and we are talking about, right now, the possibility of a direct hit with 10 to 12-foot tidal surge,” she told CNN on Monday evening.
How Strong Will It Be Tomorrow?
Milton is expected to make landfall on the west coast of Florida late Wednesday as at least a Category 3 storm, with winds of 111 to 129 mph, forecasters said on Tuesday afternoon.The storm could retain hurricane strength as it churns across central Florida toward the Atlantic Ocean and emerges on the other side of the state. That track would largely spare other states ravaged by Helene, which killed at least 230 people on its path from Florida to the Carolinas.
Milton had intensified to a Category 5 system with winds of 185 mph or greater on Monday, according to the NHC. However, the hurricane weakened overnight as it moved to the west.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis pointed out while briefing reporters on Monday afternoon that the hurricane is already far stronger than what was predicted two days ago.
“This is a ferocious hurricane,” he said.
DeSantis cautioned that while the storm is expected to weaken by the time it reaches Florida, residents shouldn’t bank on it, and he said Milton will cause destruction regardless.
“At the strength it is now, this is a really, really strong storm. The effects of that, not just from the storm surge but from wind damage and debris, will be really, really significant,” the governor said. “This is not a storm you want to take a risk on.”
DeSantis told a news conference on Tuesday afternoon that the storm will impact more than the Tampa Bay area.
What Sort of Damage Could Milton Cause?
The toll from a hurricane depends on its strength and where it makes landfall.Even a relatively weak hurricane can cause major damage and many deaths if it hits a vulnerable community or damages a key piece of infrastructure. A mid-strength hurricane, such as 2004’s Hurricane Jeanne in Florida, will cause devastating damage to homes, infrastructure, and the power grid.
Deaths also commonly occur because of flooding, accidents, injuries, and other disturbances caused by the storm.