NewsGate Press Network
Category 4 hurricane storm that had struck United States at the Florida’s coastline had killed 80.
In Florida alone, authorities reported, 76 died while four other fatalities reported in North Carolina. Local media reported damage to structures and private property would runs into billions of dollars.
In Florida’s Lee County alone, the hurricane contributed to 42 deaths. The county sheriff Carmine Marceno told reporters that the projected death toll is unknown due to the insurmountable damage the county has seen.
“Those numbers could go up,” he said. “I don’t know. I hope and pray that they don’t.”
More than 1,600 rescues have been made in Florida since Ian made landfall there on Wednesday afternoon, according to the office of Governor Ron DeSantis.
The storm brought catastrophic storm surges, heavy rains and destructive winds, and dangerous flooding to both Florida’s coast and inland areas.
Ian made landfall in South Carolina as Category 1 on Friday afternoon and weakened to a post-tropical cyclone that later dissipated across southern Virginia on Saturday.
US President Joe Biden is scheduled to travel to Puerto Rico on Monday to survey damage from Hurricane Fiona, which brought heavy rains, catastrophic damage and an island-wide blackout to the US territory last month, before heading to Florida on Wednesday.
Biden said Friday that Hurricane Ian “is likely to rank among the worst in the nation’s history.”
Estimated losses from Ian’s wind and storm surges are between 28 billion and 47 billion US dollars, according to CoreLogic, a US research firm that estimates losses from natural disasters.
Comments are closed for this post.