Idalia havoc continues, bringing flooding to Charleston
After slamming into Florida with 125-mph winds, Tropical Storm Idalia breached South Carolina’s defenses and sent tides surging to new records, leaving streets flooded — but officials and residents were thankful the aftermath wasn’t worse.
“We were very fortunate this time,” South Carolina Emergency Management Division Director Kim Stenson said Thursday as crews were ending their 24-hour storm operations, according to WSCS.
While Palmetto State officials anticipated 200,000 power outages from Idalia, there were 40,000 at the storm’s peak. By Thursday afternoon, just a few thousand homes were still without power, officials said.
Thursday’s operations centered on opening roads and investigating damage, which the station reported could continue into next week.
The weakened Idalia, which headed out to sea Thursday, is expected to continue moving away from the East Coast, forecasters said. Bermuda officials, however, warned the storm could batter the island early next week.
Idalia reached South Carolina late Wednesday after making landfall earlier in the day in Florida’s Big Bend region.
It has since been blamed for at least three deaths in Florida and Georgia.
Idalia had been downgraded from a Category 3 hurricane to a tropical storm as it made its way north from Florida through Georgia and into South Carolina throughout the day — but its arrival in the state coincided with a king high tide, resulting in a breach of Charleston’s famed Battery district, which is known for its antebellum homes.
Water was knee-high along the streets lining the area.
Almost 30,000 people throughout South Carolina remained without power Thursday morning, as Idalia moved north.
Meanwhile, more than 100,000 Georgia residents and nearly 150,000 Floridians reported their power was still out as crews in those states began cleanup efforts.
Idalia had made landfall at Keaton Beach in Florida around 7:45 a.m. Wednesday, bringing with it 125-mph winds.
After pummeling Florida and Georgia with heavy winds and torrential rain, the center of the storm moved to just about 20 miles southwest of Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, Wednesday night.
As it arrived, the tide level in Charleston Harbor reached over 9.23 feet, according to the National Weather Service — the fifth-highest peak tide since records began in 1921.
Warnings had been in place for storm surges of up to 4 feet.
The tempest had been downgraded to a tropical storm at that point but was still generating 60-mph winds.
Those strong gusts forced two drifting boats, a sailboat and a blue houseboat, to collide with the US-17 bridges connecting downtown Charleston to West Ashley, the Post and Courier reported.
Police Capt. Jason Bruder said authorities were aware that multiple boats had been reported floating in the Charleston waterways, but said the police department could not deploy its own watercraft until conditions calmed down.
The Department of Natural Resources is in charge of recovering loose boats and would take the lead on recovering them, he added.
Earlier Wednesday, a tornado ripping through South Carolina ahead of the storm surge flipped a car onto its roof, leaving two people with minor injuries.
The black sedan was driving through torrential rain near Goose Creek, on the outskirts of Charleston, shortly after 2:30 p.m. when the twister lifted its two back wheels and spun it on its hood.
Soon, the vehicle’s front two wheels were also in the air before the car came crashing down on top of another vehicle.
Still, state officials say they were spared the brunt of Idalia’s wrath.
The National Weather Service lifted the tropical storm and storm surge warnings for much of the South Carolina coastline, including Charleston and communities farther south, at 2 a.m. Thursday.
But as of 5 a.m., Myrtle Beach and the Grand Strand remained under both warnings until later in the day.
The situation was far worse in northern Florida, where one resident said, “All hell broke loose.”
Belond Thomas of Perry — a small town just inland from Big Bend — said she and her family fled to a local motel, thinking it would be safer than riding out the storm at home.
But the roof at the motel was torn away in the high wind gusts, and debris showered onto her pregnant daughter.
Several homes throughout the area also remained underwater Thursday morning, even as the floods started to recede.
Hurricane Idalia batters Florida: Here's what you need to know
Hurricane Idalia made landfall near Keaton Beach in Taylor County, Florida, as a dangerous Category 3 storm early Wednesday, August 30, 2023. It was briefly a Category 4 storm with winds reaching a brutal 125 mph. Idalia is the strongest storm to hit the Big Bend region since 1896.
- Two Florida men have died from Hurricane Idalia’s wrath.
- Nearly 270,000 Floridians are without power as a result of the storm.
- Several cities hit water level records as a result of the storm, Idalia pushed water up to 8.9 feet in Cedar Key.
- Florida has been pounded by strong winds, reaching over 80 mph in some cities, heavy rains and flooding.
- National Weather Service officials warn some areas “may be uninhabitable for several weeks or months.”
- The most impacted areas include Taylor and Dixie counties.
- Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has declared a state of emergency in 46 counties.
- Hundreds of flights have been delayed or canceled as a result of the storm.
- Thousands of National Guard troops have been deployed.
- More than 40 school districts across the state have canceled classes.
- Idalia weakened to a Category 2 storm by 9 a.m.
In Pasco County, just north of Tampa, roughly 6,000 homes were “inundated with water,” officials said.
“Many of them that we’re seeing have major damage,” Laura Wilcoxen, the county emergency management assistant director, told CNN.
“We have at least 18 inches or higher that have gone into these homes.”
More than 30,000 utility workers are trying to repair downed power lines and poles in the Sunshine State, and Florida Department of Transportation Secretary Jared Purdue said more than 700 crew members are using heavy equipment to reopen the roads, inspect bridges and restore power to traffic lights.
At the same time, state officials, more than 5,000 National Guardsmen and rescue crews are conducting search-and-rescue operations.
Urban search-and-rescue personnel have sifted through roughly 75% of the areas hit by the storm, Florida Division of Emergency Management executive director Kevin Guthrie said at a news conference Wednesday night.
Secondary searches will begin for the most heavily impacted areas to “ensure that those have been cleared and there’s nobody there.”
“We are not finding anybody at home,” Guthrie noted. “Many, many people heeded the warnings to evacuate and we, so far, have not had any reports of … fatalities related to any drowning or any flooding.”
The three deaths attributed to the storm so far have involved two car collisions in Florida and one fatality after a tree fell on a resident in Georgia.
Still, in Florida’s Citrus County, Sheriff Mike Prendergast told CNN the hurricane’s effects will continue “to play out for a long time.”