The most recent major hurricanes to hit the U.S. left hundreds of people dead and caused billions of dollars worth of damage.
The storm has weakened to a post-tropical cyclone and left millions without power and many trapped by floodwaters.
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.
Hurricane Helene weakened into a post-tropical cyclone on Friday after making landfall overnight in northwestern Florida as a ...
Tangled piles of nail-spiked lumber and displaced boats littered the streets. A house lay crushed under a fern-covered oak ...
Shore Acres took one of the hardest hits from Helene, hardening homes ahead of the storm wasn't enough for many in the area.
Helene still wielded enough power to inflict historic flooding across multiple states, millions of power outages and ...
Most of the deaths thus far from Hurricane Helene were in the Tampa Bay area, where many residents did not heed evacuation ...
ST. PETERSBURG — Households and businesses in northeast St. Petersburg will be able to flush toilets, take showers and do laundry beginning at midnight tonight ahead of schedule.
Two stories unfolded across Tampa Bay in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene’s damage Friday. Some transportation and health ...
"The water was coming through the vents, through the air-conditioning ducts, every which way you can imagine." ...
The Howard Frankland Bridge's southbound lanes of Interstate 275 are open. This means drivers from Hillsborough County can ...