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An aerial view shows destruction at the Spanish Lakes country club in Fort Pierce, Florida, in the aftermath of Hurricane Milton on October 10, 2024.
CNN  — 

On a dark September night, a fierce storm jolted Florida with winds and torrential rainfall. Less than two weeks later, Hurricane Milton has roared through the state, mercilessly hampering recovery efforts already underway.

After Helene’s strong winds, heavy rains and a wall of water took 20 lives in the state along its path from south to north, Milton has claimed at least 17 more, bringing the ocean’s fury ashore with several feet of storm surge, three months worth of rain in three hours to some areas and a deadly tornado outbreak as it churned from west to east.

The trail of destruction all the way from the Gulf to the Atlantic is vast. Flooded, blocked by fallen trees or damaged, impassable streets number in the hundreds. Exhausted emergency responders have rescued more than a thousand. And an already weakened power grid buckled for millions.

Even in a state accustomed to bouts of bad weather, facing shortages of groceries and gasoline, a tangle of insurance paperwork and debris from the last hurricane scattered anew, Floridians must now try to recover from back-to-back “once in a lifetime” storms. In an update on Saturday, Florida Lt. Gov. Jeanette Nuñez said the state deployed the largest number of national guardsmen in its history to respond to Milton.

Here is the latest:

Flooding remains a threat along swollen rivers: Milton’s deluge has left behind several bloated, slow-to-recede rivers across central and north Florida, following a pattern seen during other tropical storms and hurricanes that have approached the state in recent years. High water drains slowly across Florida’s flat terrain, which has prolonged the flooding and prompted several of the rescues that continue Saturday. CNN meteorologists said areas near Tampa downstream of the Hillsborough River, which remained at major flood stage early Saturday, may face more flooding in the coming days. A flood warning was issued for the Alafia River in Lithia, east of hard-hit Tampa, as it crossed major flood stage Thursday and exceeded more than 24 feet on Friday. The Anclote River, north of Clearwater, and the St. Johns River, between Orlando and Daytona Beach, both approaching new all-time records, are expected to remain at major flood stage through the weekend. Several people trapped in flooded homes were among the more than 1,200 people rescued statewide since Milton’s landfall. In Hillsborough County, first responders have rescued 730 people and 111 pets.

• Millions still without power: The number of Florida customers still in the dark dropped by more than a million between Thursday morning and Friday afternoon, signaling progress by energy companies working to restore electricity across the state, but 1.4 million remained without power by Saturday afternoon, according to PowerOutage.us. An outage left the sewer system in Sanibel, Florida, out of order by Friday, prompting the city manager to urge residents not to use their toilets or showers. As of 3 p.m. Saturday, power had already been restored for 2.65 million customers, according to Gov. Ron DeSantis.

• Gasoline shortage continues across the state: Gasoline was hard to come by in the Tampa Bay area as an ongoing fuel shortage wiped out the supply to more than three out of four gas stations in the area by Friday afternoon, according to gas price-tracking platform GasBuddy. Across Florida, nearly 30% of stations were without fuel, with 77.5% of those shortages reported in the Tampa-St. Petersburg area. The state’s authorities were working to distribute fuel “as fast as humanly possible,” said DeSantis. More than 37.3 million gallons of fuel will be offloaded at Florida ports by noon on Saturday, the state’s Division of Emergency Management director Kevin Guthrie said during a news conference. Three public fuel sites in Plant City, Bradenton and St. Petersburg have been opened so far, with more coming, where customers can receive 10 gallons of gas each for free, DeSantis said during the Saturday news conference. “We have right now 25 Florida Highway Patrol escorts to rush in the fuel tankers from the port, and so those are being brought in to fill out the stations,” DeSantis said.

• Airports, ocean ports and theme parks reopening: Tampa International Airport has reopened after service was suspended three days, while Sarasota Bradenton International Airport will remain closed until 9 a.m. ET Wednesday as crews work to address damage caused by the storm. The Coast Guard has reopened some ports in Florida, as well as several ports in Georgia and South Carolina, although many Florida ports were still closed as of Friday. Meanwhile, Walt Disney World, Aquatica Orlando, Discovery Cove and SeaWorld Orlando theme parks have resumed welcoming visitors. Busch Gardens Tampa Bay and Adventure Island, however, will remain closed on Saturday.

• St. Petersburg assists residents: The city of St. Petersburg, one of the areas hit hardest by Milton, has set up temporary stations to help residents in need. They’ll offer essential supplies like bottled water, batteries, tarps and cleanup kits, and a place to charge devices because it will take time for power to be restored. A fuel distribution site has been set up, where city residents can get up to 10 gallons of gasoline, and will remain open until the gasoline is gone. The city remains under a boil water notice due to multiple line breaks, many caused by fallen trees, and 25 crews are on the streets, picking up debris. “We have weathered two storms in less than two weeks. This is unprecedented from a debris standpoint but it’s still our top priority to get our city cleaned up and resume to some type of normalcy,” said Mike Jefferis, city enrichment administrator.

Joe Raedle/Getty Images
A bicycle rider navigates a damaged road along the Gulf of Mexico in Manasota Key, Florida, on Sunday, October 13.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images
A vehicle is seen stuck in beach sand in Manasota Key, Florida, on Sunday.
Rebecca Blackwell/AP
A man peers into the remains of a home on Manasota Key in Englewood, Florida, on Sunday.
Rebecca Blackwell/AP
A family walks back up a sand-coated street on Saturday, October 12, after checking on their storm-damaged home on Manasota Key.
Rebecca Blackwell/AP
A toppled tree lies on a home on Manasota Key on Saturday.
Crystal Vander Weit/TCPalm/USA Today Network/Imagn Images
Connie Gore, left, is comforted by her friend and neighbor Cecelia Smith on Friday, October 11, after a tornado caused by Hurricane Milton devastated her home in Martin County, Florida.
Miguel J. Rodriguez Carrillo/AFP/Getty Images
Houses sit destroyed in Port St Lucie, Florida, on Friday after a tornado hit the area and caused severe damage as the hurricane swept through.
Rebecca Blackwell/AP
Robert Turick stands in one of his home's bedrooms, where the high water mark from Hurricane Milton can be seen on the wall, in Englewood, Florida, on Friday. A small positive, Turick said, is that he hadn't yet begun repairs after Hurricane Helene brought 3-foot flood waters, and he, his dog, and his daughter were staying elsewhere when Milton flooded his home around to 5 feet.
Cristobal Herrera-Ulashkevich/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
A rescue team checks a damaged property on Manasota Key on Friday.
Spencer Platt/Getty Images
A person walks through a flooded street from the rising Anclote River in New Port Richey, Florida, on Friday.
Rebecca Blackwell/AP
The rails of a pool ladder are all that is visible Friday of a pool that was filled with sand after the passage of Hurricane Milton in Venice, Florida.
Julio Cortez/AP
This bridge in Riverview, Florida, seen on Friday, was damaged by Milton.
Giorgio Viera/AFP/Getty Images
A man cleans debris inside a gas station in Lakewood Park, Florida, on Thursday, October 10. A tornado caused by Milton hit the area.
Rebecca Blackwell/AP
A tree toppled by the storm lies atop a home in Siesta Key, Florida, on Thursday.
Ricardo Arduengo/Reuters
Boats are piled up on a pier after they were washed ashore when Milton passed through Punta Gorda, Florida, on Thursday.
Andrew West/The News-Press/USA Today Network/Imagn Images
Liz Kelly and her son Matt salvage items from their destroyed home in North Fort Myers, Florida, on Thursday. A tornado associated with Hurricane Milton ripped through their neighborhood. Matt dove on top of his mother as the roof was peeling off the home. She says he saved her life.
Chandan Khanna/AFP/Getty Images
A vehicle drives though a flooded street in Siesta Key on Thursday.
Nadia Zomorodian/Daytona Beach News-Journal/USA Today Network/Reuters
Members of the Volusia Sheriff's Office rescue residents from a flooded area of South Daytona, Florida, on Thursday.
Rebecca Blackwell/AP
A house lies toppled off its stilts after Milton passed through Florida's Bradenton Beach.
Julio Cortez/AP
The roof of Tropicana Field, destroyed by Milton, was shredded in St. Petersburg on Thursday. Tropicana Field is the home of Major League Baseball’s Tampa Bay Rays.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images
Austin Stolpe clears mud from the floor of the Celtic Ray Public House after it was inundated with floodwaters in Punta Gorda.
Julio Cortez/AP
People look at an uprooted tree in Odessa, Florida, on Thursday.
Sean Rayford/Getty Images
A man cleans sand off a beach-side condominium unit in Venice on Thursday.
Marta Lavandier/AP
Cars move slowly through Matlacha, Florida, on Thursday after Hurricane Milton damaged power lines.
Jefferee Woo/Tampa Bay Times via AP
A person rides a bicycle past a damaged building in the Palmetto Beach neighborhood of Tampa on Thursday.
Cristobal Herrera-Ulashkevich/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
A boat and debris are seen along a road in Bradenton, Florida, on Thursday.
Sean Rayford/Getty Images
People walk near damaged beachside property in Venice on Thursday.
Tampa Bay Times/AP
The building that houses the Tampa Bay Times newspaper was damaged when a construction crane fell during the storm in St. Petersburg, Florida.
Bryan R. Smith/AFP/Getty Images
People are rescued from an apartment complex in Clearwater on Thursday.
Chris Urso/Tampa Bay Times/AP
Debris clogs a roadway in Siesta Key on Thursday.
NOAA
A satellite image captures Hurricane Milton reaching the coast of Florida on Wednesday, October 9.
Marco Bello/Reuters
A man in Sarasota, Florida, records the storm as it makes landfall on Wednesday.
Rebecca Blackwell/AP
The Segundo family, who evacuated from nearby Davis Island, plays a board game at a hotel in Tampa on Wednesday.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images
Brandon Marlow walks through a flooded street in Fort Myers, Florida, on Wednesday.
Bill Ingram/Palm Beach Post/USA Today Network via Reuters
Marie Cook reacts to her damaged home after a tornado formed by Milton touched down in Wellington, Florida, on Wednesday.
Doug Engle/Ocala Star-Banner/USA Today Network/Imagn Images
Stephen Lundgren lies on the floor of the Vanguard High School cafeteria as he tries to get some sleep at the Ocala, Florida, shelter on Wednesday.
Rebecca Blackwell/AP
Ron Rook, who said he was looking for people in need of help or debris to clear, walks down a deserted street in downtown Tampa on Wednesday.
Paul Hennessy/Anadolu/Getty Images
Check-in kiosks are covered in protective plastic at Orlando International Airport on Wednesday. The airport ceased operations at 8 a.m. Wednesday.
Bill Ingram/The Palm Beach Post/USA Today Network/Imagn Images
Palm Beach County Sheriff's deputies attend to residents affected by a reported tornado in Wellington on Wednesday.
Saul Martinez/Getty Images
People walk through the Disney Springs shopping complex in Orlando ahead of the hurricane's arrival on Wednesday.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images
Payton Wyse and Andrew Goncharsky pack what they can as they evacuate their Fort Myers apartment on Wednesday.
Rebecca Blackwell/AP
Christian Burke stands at the door of his home in Gulfport, Florida, on Wednesday. Outside, a boat sits on its side due to Hurricane Helene.
Ricardo Arduengo/Reuters
A Lee County deputy sheriff talks to a driver near the Fort Myers Beach bridge, which was closed on Wednesday.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images
Connor Ferran surveys what is left of his Fort Myers home after what appeared to be a tornado tore the roof off on Wednesday. Milton spawned several tornadoes as it neared landfall.
Kaila Jones/TC Palm/USA Today Network/Imagn Images
Nicolette Mariano, CEO and aquaculture biologist for her oyster farm, Treasure Coast Shellfish, secures oysters from the farm's dockside nursery in Sebastian, Florida, on Wednesday.
Damon Higgins/Palm Beach Daily News/USA Today Network via Imagn Images
An employee of Roofs Done Right attaches metal shutters to a building in Palm Beach, Florida, on Wednesday.
Rebecca Blackwell/AP
Ted Carlson puts McKenzie, a cat belonging to his friend Evan Purcell, into a pickup truck as they evacuate Purcell's home on Florida's Anna Maria Island on Tuesday, October 8. "This place couldn't handle Helene," Carlson said. "It's all going to be gone."
Rebecca Blackwell/AP
Members of the Florida Army National Guard check for any remaining residents in nearly deserted Bradenton Beach on Tuesday. Around them, piles of debris from Hurricane Helene still sit outside damaged homes.
Yamil Lage/AFP/Getty Images
A man wades through a street in Havana, Cuba, that was flooded on Wednesday.
Bryan R. Smith/AFP/Getty Images
A hospital worker walks by as an AquaFence flood wall is put into place around Tampa General Hospital on Tuesday.
NASA
NASA astronaut Matthew Dominick shared this photo from the International Space Station on Tuesday. "We flew over Hurricane Milton about 90 minutes ago," he said. "Here is the view out the Dragon Endeavour window."
Lorenzo Hernandez/Reuters
Aurelio Ortiz sits in his flooded home in Celestún, Mexico, on Tuesday.
Mike Carlson/AP
Debris from homes flooded by Hurricane Helene is piled up on curbs in Port Richey, Florida, on Tuesday.
Jose Luis Gonzalez/Reuters
People prepare sandbags in Orlando on Tuesday.
Chris O'Meara/AP
John Fedor waits for transportation to a shelter after his flight was canceled at the Tampa International Airport on Tuesday.
Marta Lavandier/AP
David Jalving throws outdoor furniture into his father's pool in Fort Myers to prepare for Hurricane Milton.
Julio Cortez/AP
Heavy traffic flows northbound on Interstate 75 as people evacuate the Tampa Bay area late on Monday, October 7.
Bryan R. Smith/AFP/Getty Images
A man clears debris left by Hurricane Helene from his home in Treasure Island, Florida, on Monday.
Octavio Jones/Reuters
A dock is damaged in St. Pete Beach, Florida, on Monday.
Tristan Wheelock/Bloomberg/Getty Images
Piles of debris from Hurricane Helene remain uncollected in Treasure Island on Monday.
Marta Lavandier/AP
Domenic Gerald takes a break to watch the latest forecast while packing up his father's vacation home in Fort Myers Beach on Monday.
Martin Zetina/AP
A man in Progreso boards up an apartment building to protect it from Hurricane Milton on Monday.
Mike Carlson/AP
Contractors in New Port Richey help clean debris left by Hurricane Helene.
Octavio Jones/Reuters
Tropicana Field opened Monday as a staging site for workers and operations. Part of its roof was later torn off during the storm.
Gregg Newton/AFP/Getty Images
Customers check mostly empty bread shelves at a shopping warehouse in Kissimmee, Florida, on Sunday, October 6.

Recovery will take time and money

Crews working to clear debris and restore power have to contend with thousands of downed trees, and police are aiding recovery efforts by providing escorts to fuel tankers trying to reach those most in need.

“We’ve had a lot of flooding,” Hillsborough County Sheriff Chad Chronister said in a Saturday news conference. “Storm surge comes in, does its damage and leaves. With 16 inches of rain and flooding, the water doesn’t subside as rapidly as all of us would like, so, this healing, this recovery is taking a lot longer.”

Chronister said the county conducted over 300 rescues in just the last 48 hours. He said recovery teams are working around the clock but some of the work that needs to be done is daunting.

“A lot of obstacles that they’re facing aren’t just downed power lines, but the trees wrapped up in the power lines, so there’s a lot of collaborative effort there to get that restored,” he said.

Duke Energy, Florida’s largest power company, warned against people wanting to clear the debris themselves about the possibility of downed lines hiding beneath the rubble.

Giorgio Viera/AFP/Getty Images
A man cleans debris inside a gas station store in Lakewood Park, Florida, after a tornado hit the area as Hurricane Milton swept through on October 10, 2024.

“We are encouraging them to stay away from debris where there would potentially be any type of overhead wire,” Melissa Seixas, Florida president of Duke Energy, told CNN’s Kate Bolduan on Friday. “They don’t necessarily spark. They don’t necessarily hiss. But they are a silent, deadly killer for somebody who is not trained to handle them.”

Cleanup crews are working a “24/7 operation,” Governor Ron DeSantis said Friday as the state attempts to speed up the process. “The norm in a major hurricane, debris takes sometimes a year to get picked up,” DeSantis said. “I don’t think that makes sense. I don’t think that’s good for recovery.”

Meanwhile, Florida officials are urging people to be aware of financial predators while hiring Milton-related repair services.

“Many areas in the county have incurred severe property damage because of back-to-back impacts from Hurricane Helene and Hurricane Milton,” Pinellas County Consumer Protection said in a public advisory Thursday.

“Watch out for ‘fly-by-night’ contractors who take deposits and do little or no work,” the advisory stated. “Avoid dealing with anyone soliciting work door-to-door; take the opportunity to check them out first.”

Florida consumer protection teams encouraged people who want to donate funds toward recovery to “ask for a copy of the charity’s financial report to determine how much of your contribution is going toward the cause and how much goes to administrative and fundraising costs.”

Government agencies and nonprofits work to help

On Sunday, President Joe Biden will visit parts of Florida hit by Milton, the White House said Friday.

FEMA administrator Deanne Criswell said the agency has enough funding to “support the immediate needs” of people reeling from the impacts of both Helene and Milton but will require additional funding soon.

“We’re assessing every day how much it’s drawing down on that so I can continue to work with my leadership, as well as Congress as far as when we will need a supplemental,” Criswell said in a Friday news conference. “We will need one. It’s just a matter of when.”

She encouraged survivors to apply for assistance to help with temporary housing and longer-term recovery costs, and added FEMA would work with impacted communities to remove debris from both hurricanes.

The American Red Cross said its teams are supporting reunification efforts for individuals who went missing after Milton slammed Florida, as ongoing power outages and limited internet connectivity have left some people unable to communicate with loved ones. The organization said it was also traveling into impacted areas to identify persons in need who may not have sought refuge in shelters.

The Florida National Guard is supporting over 100 active search and rescue missions in 19 counties, according to DeSantis. Over 1,000 people have been rescued from floodwaters and other hazards, the governor said.

Those having trouble contacting family and friends can submit a request through the Red Cross website, the organization said. Its teams continued Saturday searching for people who went missing after Hurricane Helene in Georgia, Tennessee, the Carolinas and Florida.

On Thursday, the Red Cross said it’s helping to support 83,000 people who sought refuge in Florida evacuation shelters.

“As conditions improve, dozens of emergency response vehicles will begin to travel through affected neighborhoods, delivering meals and relief supplies,” the nonprofit said in a news release.

CNN’s Andy Rose, Paradise Afshar and Amanda Musa contributed to this report.