Residents in the Venetian Isles neighborhood of St. Petersburg, Fla., began to comb through their homes in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene.
Officials from the City of St. Petersburg are urging residents not to flush their toilets or take showers now that a water treatment plant has been taken offline.
Households and businesses in northeast St. Petersburg will be able to flush toilets, take showers and do laundry beginning at ...
"The water was coming through the vents, through the air-conditioning ducts, every which way you can imagine." ...
The Northeast Sewer Treatment Facility was taken offline Thursday night to protect it from storm surge damage from Hurricane ...
ST. PETERSBURG — The city of St. Petersburg has known since at least 2022 that its lowest-lying sewage plant could not handle ...
Storm surge has temporarily knocked out a major sewer plant in St. Pete, Florida, forcing residents to stop flushing toilets ...
As Hurricane Helene makes landfall in Florida later today, Duke Energy Florida is reminding customers that the company has ...
Across St. Petersburg, stunning images emerged early Friday morning of flooding unlike previous storms. In Shore Acres, water ...
Duke Energy readies 8,000 workers, urges customers to stay safe as Tropical Storm Helene approaches Florida ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. – Duke Energy Florida is readying 8,000 workers to respond to Tropical ...
ABC News' Ginger Zee has a live update from St. Petersburg, Florida, on Hurricane Helene. The storm is barreling toward ...