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Helene kills 64, submerges historic village; hundreds of roads closed in North Carolina 

Hundreds of thousands remain without power as a result of the storm, which made landfall in Florida’s Big Bend region as a Category 4 hurricane.

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What we know about Helene

  • Helene, a post-tropical cyclone, was expected to stall over the Tennessee Valley through the weekend, and could bring an additional 1 to 2 inches of rain across parts of the Ohio Valley.
  • At least 64 deaths have been confirmed as a result of the storm, which made landfall Thursday night in Florida's Big Bend region as a Category 4 hurricane. Seventeen people, including children, died in Georgia due to Helene, the governor said after viewing damage in Valdosta.
  • More than 3 million customers are without power in the Carolinas, Georgia, Florida, Virginia, Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio and Indiana.
  • That includes more than 1.6 million customers in the Carolinas, and 700,000 in Georgia, as the post-tropical cyclone unleashed life-threatening flooding and prompted evacuation warnings.
  • A dam in Greene County, Tenn., on the border with North Carolina, is still intact after officials warned of an imminent breach and told residents downstream to move to higher ground.
  • NBC News Lite, a lightweight version of NBCNews.com available in emergency situations when internet connectivity may be limited, has been turned on for readers in Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama and North Carolina.
29w ago / 12:40 AM EDT

At least 64 dead due to Helene

At least 64 storm-related deaths have been confirmed since Hurricane Helene made landfall on Thursday.

NBC News confirmed two additional fatalities in Anderson County, South Carolina, bringing the state's total to at least 24 dead.

Emergency declarations for assistance have been granted to the state, in addition to Alabama, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and Tennessee to bolster responses efforts in the aftermath of the storm, according to the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

More than 3,200 FEMA staff and federal partners have been deployed in various states, the agency said Saturday.

29w ago / 11:31 PM EDT

10 deaths confirmed in N.C.

At least 10 storm-related deaths have been reported in North Carolina, the latest being a man who drove his truck through flooded roads, Gov. Roy Cooper said in a statement tonight.

The governor said crews have rescued more than 200 people since Helene made landfall on Thursday.

“The catastrophic devastation to western North Carolina is like nothing we have ever seen,” Cooper said. “Emergency responders are working around the clock coordinating rescues and getting resources to help people with their immediate needs as they work to save lives.”

Though "many of the rivers and tributaries are still far above flood stage," waters are receding, state officials said according to the statement. Water levels are expected to be near-normal by late Monday.

29w ago / 11:02 PM EDT

Florida officials concerned about electric vehicles left behind

Officials in Pinellas County, Florida today expressed concern about electric vehicles left behind by those fleeing Helene.

In a post on social media platform X, the county government in the Tampa Bay area said electric vehicles submerged in salt water can erupt in flames. It asked residents who left such cars, SUVs and golf carts behind to check in with the county information center.

The post included a video of a Tesla ablaze in a closed garage.

"If you evacuated and left an electric vehicle or golf cart in your garage or under a building and you are not able to get to it or move it, we want you to let us know," the county government said.

The location of any EVs left behind would be given to local fire officials so they can prepare properly should they have to respond to fire that happens to involve electric vehicle batteries, it said.

The National Transportation Safety Board says lithium-ion battery fires "pose the risk of electric shock to emergency responders from exposure to the high-voltage components of a damaged lithium-ion battery."

The National Volunteer Fire Council adds that such fires post additional risks including high heat, ejecting pieces of battery components, and "toxic byproducts of combustion such as hydrogen fluoride or phosphoryl fluoride."

29w ago / 10:31 PM EDT

Western North Carolina hit with life-threatening flooding and mudslides

George Solis
Reporting from Asheville, N.C.

The Carolinas and Tennessee are reeling from catastrophic flooding and mudslides that knocked out homes, roads and bridges. Food and water are running low in some areas. NBC News’ George Solis reports from Asheville, North Carolina.

29w ago / 9:39 PM EDT

About 390 roads, dozens of highways remain closed in N.C.

Officials in North Carolina are continuing to encourage residents to avoid traveling anywhere in the western part of the state "as about 390 roads and dozens of main highways remain closed Saturday due to flooding, downed trees, landslides or storm damage," Gov. Roy Cooper said in an update this evening.

Interstate 26 in North Carolina, south of Asheville, was open, but remains the only major road leading to the area because of damage to Interstate 40, as well as other routes, Cooper said.

The state Department of Transportation is working to reopen interstates and highways before getting to smaller roads, but is also working in conjunction with utility companies and local emergency officials to "find alternative routes and to assist in maintaining access to shelters and restoring power," Cooper's statement said.

Emergency crews in the state are also focused on supplying drinkable water to residents.

According to the statement, seven water plants in the state are closed, impacting 70,000 households.

An additional 17 water plants have no power, and 23 more are "operating on backup power" and there are 50 boil water advisories in effect across the western part of the state, the statement said.

29w ago / 9:23 PM EDT

'Our entire house is flooded': Florida residents forced to leave home, stay in shelter

Reporting from Clearwater, Fla.

A shelter on Florida's Gulf Coast is the only thing some people have left after Helene tore through the state, leaving a trail of destruction in its wake.

"Our entire house is flooded. Everything that we have is gone," Rasheedah Miley of St. Petersburg said outside a shelter in Clearwater. "This is what we have left right here, the shelter. Thank God for them because they’re amazing."

Miley, and her wife, Imani, had to flee their home with their dog, Sasha, after water came crashing in.

"The water was literally coming up. It was just rising,” Rasheedah Miley said. 

29w ago / 9:02 PM EDT

Deaths confirmed in Asheville

There have been deaths confirmed in Asheville, North Carolina, although an exact number has not been released.

"We can confirm that fatalities have been suffered and we continue to recover bodies," Asheville Police Department chief Mike Lamb said in a statement.

There have been at least seven Helene-related deaths in the state, although none of those were from Asheville. A majority of those deaths were attributed to falling trees.

29w ago / 8:23 PM EDT

Helene delivered astonishing rain amounts to North Carolina

After Helene made Florida landfall Thursday and moved north into Georgia, South Carolina, Tennessee, and North Carolina, it delivered astonishing amounts of rain, with one location registering 30 inches.

That storm total was measured at a remote automatic weather station in the community of Busick, near Mount Mitchell State Park in eastern North Carolina. The park registered a storm total of 2 feet of rain.

The numbers were released in a National Weather Service Weather Prediction Center storm summary that includes rainfall measurements for the entire "weather event" from Wednesday, a day before landfall, to today.

Though rain has been moving out, the figures are preliminary, the weather service said.

Three other North Carolina locations posted rain amounts of 20 inches or greater: Spruce Pine (23 inches), Foscoe (21), and Boone (20), according to the summary. A handful of locations received more than a foot of rain, including Asheville, which got 13.15 inches.

South Carolina had six locations with rainfall of a foot or greater, the summary said. Georgia had a dozen such locations, with the remote automatic weather station at Tallulah recording 14 inches.

Helene made landfall near Perry, Florida, and wrought destruction from the Tampa Bay area to the Big Bend coast. Only one location in the state recorded a foot or more of rain: Sumatra, roughly 30 miles inland of the Big Bend coast, which registered nearly 16 inches.

29w ago / 7:52 PM EDT

Military members retire fallen American flag in Asheville

George Solis
Reporting from Asheville, N.C.

Military members were seen retiring an American flag found in mud and debris amid the devastation in historic Biltmore Village in Asheville, North Carolina.

Out of respect, the military personnel picked up the flag and folded it amid the mud and rubble.

29w ago / 7:25 PM EDT

Helene brought hurricane-force winds

Helene was fueled by its tropical origins and the unusually warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico, but the strength-sapping affects of normally dry land didn't stop it from producing structure-crushing winds.

Perry, Florida, just inland of Thursday's landfall, recorded peak wind gusts of 99 mph during the weather event, which spanned from Wednesday to today, according to the National Weather Service's Weather Prediction Center.

That's well within Category 1 hurricane status, which requires maximum sustained winds of at least 74 mph.

Hurricane-force wind gusts were recorded from Clearwater Beach, Florida, part of the Tampa Bay region, to the Big Bend coast south of Tallahassee, according to the prediction center's roundup of Helene data.

Mount Mitchell State Park in North Carolina registered gusts of 106 during the event, the weather service said.

Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort in South Carolina measured wind gusts of 75 mph, just surpassing hurricane-force status.

Even Savannah, Georgia, on a coast not struck by Helene, posted hurricane-force gusts of 76 mph, the prediction center said.