What to know
- At least 215 people are known to have died as a result of the destruction wrought by Hurricane Helene since it made landfall in Florida a week ago.
- More than half of the deaths were in North Carolina, where several feet of fast-moving water destroyed entire communities.
- Hundreds are still missing, and officials have reported difficulties in identifying some of the dead.
- President Joe Biden visited North Carolina yesterday and announced that up to 1,000 active-duty soldiers will join the North Carolina National Guard in delivering supplies, food and water to isolated communities.
- If you would like to help donate to survivors of Helene, several organizations, including the Red Cross and National Voluntary Organizations Active in Disaster, are seeking assistance from the public.
- 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, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Alabama.
Pack mules deliver supplies, including ice for insulin, to remote areas of North Carolina
Video shows a team from Mountain Mule Packer Ranch — an organization in North Carolina that specializes in "high altitude, crew-served weapons, and extreme terrain pack animal supply trains" — delivering ice this week to help a man store his insulin.
Mountain Mule Packer Ranch said on Facebook that it is delivering supplies to the mountainous region of Buncombe County, which includes the cites of Asheville and Swannanoa, that was devastated by Hurricane Helene.
The group posted photos of its mule team climbing mountain roads that had been split and washed away by the storm.
FEMA and Homeland Security officials respond to funding criticism
FEMA has responded to criticism from Republicans about the agency’s availability of funds for the rest of this year’s hurricane season after Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said FEMA can meet immediate needs but “does not have the funds to make it through the season.”
Critics seized on Mayorkas’ statements to reporters yesterday on Air Force One, saying the Department of Homeland Security spent $600 million on shelters and services for migrants.
A DHS spokesperson responded today to the criticism, saying the claims are “completely false.”
“As Secretary Mayorkas said, FEMA has the necessary resources to meet the immediate needs associated with Hurricane Helene and other disasters,” the spokesperson said. “The Shelter and Services Program (SSP) is a completely separate, appropriated grant program that was authorized and funded by Congress and is not associated in any way with FEMA’s disaster-related authorities or funding streams.”
Jaclyn Rothenberg, FEMA’s director of public affairs, reiterated that the agency “has what it needs for immediate response and recovery efforts.”
“As [FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell] has said, she has the full authority to spend against the President’s budget, but we’re not out of hurricane season yet so we need to keep a close eye on it,” Rothenberg posted today on X. “We may need to go back into immediate needs funding and we will be watching it closely.”
4 workers from Tennessee plastics plant now confirmed dead
Four people who were working at Impact Plastics, a facility in Erwin, Tennessee, are now confirmed dead, the Unicoi County Emergency Management Agency said at a news conference today.
One of them was Johnny Peterson, 55, of Erwin. Peterson, whose body was found Monday, died in river flooding caused by Hurricane Helene, according to an obituary hosted by Ledford Funeral Homes. The Nolichucky River is close to the facility where he worked.
His daughter, Alexa Peterson, confirmed her father’s death to NBC News.
Impact Plastics is under investigation by the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation amid allegations from workers that they weren’t allowed to leave before the flooding began. The company denies the allegations.
'Complete devastation' of transportation and water infrastructure in western North Carolina, governor says
Helene was an “unprecedented, devastating storm” for western North Carolina, Gov. Roy Cooper said today in a news briefing, adding that “complete devastation” to the area’s transportation and water infrastructure is likely to cost billions.
“It’s going to take billions of dollars to make sure that we bring this transportation back up where it needs to be, but we need to take this time to make sure that when we rebuild western North Carolina — and we will — that it’s done in a more resilient way,” Cooper said.
He said that search-and-rescue operations continue and that emergency personnel are working to restore power, repair damaged utilities and deliver food and water to those in need.
At least 98 people in North Carolina have died of storm-related causes. Cooper said the death toll is expected to rise as recovery efforts continue.
Rural North Carolina residents are still waiting for Helene relief
Bottled water, generators and oxygen top the list of supplies needed by crews working to reach people still stranded by Hurricane Helene in Mitchell County, North Carolina.
Georgia agriculture devastated; governor says cotton and pecan crops are nearly a 'complete loss'
Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp said parts of the state are still grappling with significant damage from Helene, including widespread devastation to Georgia’s agricultural sector.
“I think the cotton crop will be almost a complete loss, a lot of the pecan crop will be a complete loss, or at least a complete loss for the affected counties there,” Kemp said. “So it’s going to be significant, not to mention the structures that have been damaged.”
He said he has spoken to Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack about damage to farms, crops and poultry houses in the state, adding that the financial losses in the agriculture industry are expected to be steep.
“As you all know, the ag economy was not good before the storm, and it’s worse now,” he said.
Helene’s death toll in Georgia has climbed to 33. Vilsack and President Joe Biden are scheduled to travel to Georgia today to survey damage and meet with first responders and local officials.
Helene survivor says her street ‘was already a river’ when evacuation order came
Tissica Schoch describes riding out Hurricane Helene in her Black Mountain, North Carolina, neighborhood, where rising water trapped her and many of her neighbors.
Map: Close to 1 million still without power
Three counties in Georgia — Atkinson, Jefferson and Montgomery — are still more than 90% without power, and across the Southeast more than 970,000 customers remain in the dark.
Tennessee speedway to serve as disaster relief center
The Bristol Motor Speedway in Bristol, Tennessee, will serve as the Northeast Tennessee Disaster Relief Center, operating as a donation and collection site, a staging area for search-and-rescue teams and a distribution center for recovery resources.
“Our communities, friends and loved ones are hurting, and we stand ready to assist in any way that we possibly can,” Jerry Caldwell, the speedway’s president and general manager, said in a statement.
The track, which has hosted a variety of events, including NASCAR races, will also be the site of a regional disaster relief hotline, which came online this morning. People in need can reach it at 423-830-2696.
A donation center in the BMS South Building off Volunteer Parkway will be open daily from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., accepting bottled water, nonperishable food, baby supplies, personal hygiene products and other goods.
Video shows NASCAR star spotting person stranded in mountains as he delivers aid in helicopter
Former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle was being hailed a hero after he used a private helicopter to deliver resources and supplies to people who have been stranded or are otherwise in need.
Biffle, a NASCAR Hall of Fame nominee and pilot, has been sharing videos on X of some of the supply runs, including one in which a person stranded in the mountains got his attention from over a mile away using a mirror to reflect light from the sun.
“6 attempts to land due to difficulty but we got there — got him a chainsaw, EpiPens, insulin, chicken food, formula, gas, 2 stroke oil, and sandwiches premade from Harris Teeter before we left,” Biffle wrote about the incident.
Biffle’s videos have also documented the widespread devastation across western North Carolina.
Huge craters, walls of mud and total destruction in Swannanoa
Reporting from Swannanoa, North Carolina
Sam Brock reports from Swannanoa, North Carolina, where an entire community has been uprooted and devastated by floodwaters, with a long way to go before returning to normality.
Thousands of North Carolina residents are still without electricity or clean running water following Hurricane Helene.
Helene's death toll tops 200
At least 202 people are confirmed dead from Hurricane Helene, according to an NBC News tally.
The fatalities include at least 98 deaths in North Carolina, 19 in Florida, 33 in Georgia, 39 in South Carolina, 11 in Tennessee and two in Virginia.
Tennessee OSHA opens investigation into plastics factory
Tennessee’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration announced Wednesday that it has opened an investigation into Impact Plastics, a factory in Erwin, Tennessee, where several workers died and some went missing after they were swept away by floodwaters from Helene.
A separate investigation into the plastics factory is already underway by the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation. Tennessee OSHA said it will work with local officials and the Bureau of Investigation to coordinate an on-site inspection.
“During the investigative process, TOSHA investigators typically survey the location of the fatality, review company records and procedures, and conduct interviews with management and employees,” the agency said in a statement, adding that it has not received a fatality report from managers at Impact Plastics.
These kinds of investigations can take up to six months to complete. A final report with the agency’s findings will be available to the public.
More rainfall on the way for Gulf Coast and parts of Florida
The National Hurricane Center is tracking several storms and disturbances currently brewing, including an area of interest in the Gulf of Mexico that has only a 30% chance of developing into a tropical depression but is still expected to dump several inches of rain across the Gulf Coast and parts of Florida in the coming days.
The area of showers and thunderstorms will likely move slowly, posing a rainfall risk in southern and central Florida next week, regions that are still reeling from Hurricane Helene.
Heavy rainfall from this system is not expected to affect parts of North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia that were hit hard by Helene, according to the latest forecasts.
Meanwhile, both Hurricane Kirk and Tropical Storm Leslie in the Atlantic do not pose a direct threat to land, according to the NHC. Kirk is, however, expected to strengthen into a Category 4 storm, and could generate swells that reach the East Coast of the United States on Sunday, causing dangerous rip current conditions.
North Carolina prisons move more than 800 inmates due to lack of power
Two prisons in western North Carolina have moved more than 800 inmates because they lack power and water, the North Carolina Department of Adult Correction said today.
People detained in Mountain View Correctional Institution in Spruce Pine and Craggy Correctional Center in Asheville are being moved due to what the department called "long timeframes" expected for the restoration of essential services.
They are being moved to six prisons across the state. The department moved 2,000 prisoners earlier this week.
South Carolina couple killed after tree fell on home in Helene found hugging one another
South Carolina grandparents Marcia and Jerry Savage, 74 and 78, were killed when a tree fell on their bedroom during Helene last week.
Their grandson John Savage, 22, told The Associated Press he had checked on his grandparents during the storm and found them lying in bed. Then, Savage said, he heard a giant “boom” as one of the biggest trees on the family’s Beech Island property fell on top of the grandparents’ bedroom.
Savage said he found his grandparents hugging each other in the bed.
“When they pulled them out of there, my grandpa apparently heard the tree snap beforehand and rolled over to try and protect my grandmother,” he said.
The family remembered Marcia Savage, a retired bank teller, as an active church member who loved singing and cooking for the family. Jerry Savage had worked as an electrician and carpenter and was “in and out of retirement” because he loved to work.
The pair were teenage sweethearts and were married for over 50 years. Their deaths are just two of at least 190 linked to Helene.
Hurricane Kirk in the Atlantic to bring 'life-threatening' swells to U.S. East Coast on Sunday
Another hurricane in the Atlantic is forecast to bring large swells to the U.S. coast by Sunday.
Hurricane Kirk, currently a Category 3 storm, is about 2,000 miles east of the Northern Leeward Islands, moving northwest. The National Hurricane Center said there are no watches or warnings in effect, as Kirk is well out in the ocean. However, it’s forecast to generate swells that could reach the East Coast of the United States on Sunday.
“These swells are likely to cause life-threatening surf and rip current conditions,” the National Hurricane Center warned.
Photos show damage in Lake Lure, N.C., days after Helene brought record rainfall
Damaged structures and and roads covered in mud are seen days after Helene tore through parts of North Carolina.
Biden to tour storm damage in Florida and Georgia
Biden will travel to Florida and Georgia today to tour damage from Hurricane Helene.
He is scheduled to take an aerial tour of affected areas en route to Perry, Florida, and will receive an operational briefing in Keaton Beach. The president will then tour damaged areas in Ray City, Georgia, before delivering remarks in the afternoon.
NBC affiliate raises $650,000 for Helene victims
A TV station in Raleigh, North Carolina, raised $648,000 in a telethon last night for charities and aid groups helping stricken communities across the state.
Among the groups NBC affiliate WRAL was raising funds for is the Red Cross, which declared an urgent need for blood and platelet donations. More than 1,000 scheduled donations across the Carolinas and Georgia failed to be collected because of Hurricane Helene, the group said.
"Hospitals are overwhelmed, supplies are depleted, and blood and platelets are desperately needed. Those in areas of the state who can safely give blood are asked to roll up their sleeves and donate today to ensure that those who need access to lifesaving care can receive it. Pledge to give blood via this link," WRAL wrote.
'I felt like I'd gotten beat up': Tennessee National Guardsmen on Unicoi County hospital rescue
Some members of the Tennessee Army National Guard are speaking out about Friday's rescue of dozens of people stranded on the roof of Unicoi County Hospital, and on nearby lifeboats, after the building was engulfed by Helene floods.
Dan Backus, a chief warrant officer in the Tennessee National Guard, said he and other soldiers raced a Black Hawk helicopter to the scene, but it was difficult amid fierce storm winds.
“The winds were violent. There was a lot of turbulence. I’ve been telling the guys after we got done flying that day, I felt like I’d gotten beat up in a street fight or something,” Backus told NBC affiliate WBIR of Knoxville.
Once on the scene, the guard members quickly sprung into action.
“My co-pilot Dan Backus and I chose to go to the left side and start working hoist missions, and we tasked our other two aircraft with staying on the right side, from our perspective, of the hospital doing the ambulatory patient transfers,” Capt. Brandon Rodriguez said.
From there, the guard members coordinated rescue flights with different first responder agencies, evacuated stranded patients from the roof of the hospital, and rescued first responders and individuals stranded in boats or on floating debris.
The guard members said crews stationed with them at McGhee Tyson Airport have rescued about 100 people over the weekend and delivered tens of thousands of pounds of supplies.
East Tennessee residents urged to avoid open water
Residents were warned yesterday against "all contact with water bodies affected by the extreme flooding in East Tennessee."
The advisory was issued by the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation (TDEC) and applies to surface waters in the Nolichucky, French Broad, Pigeon, Doe and Watauga River watersheds and any other waters affected by flooding.
The TDEC said “several wastewater treatment plants have been compromised” in Helene’s flooding and “are temporarily unable to completely treat effluent before it enters receiving waters.” Further, sewer line crossings also may have been "severed or damaged" following the storm.
The TDEC said the advisory was issued out of caution, not based on water quality data. Those who do come into contact with floodwaters are urged to "wash as soon as possible with clean water and soap."
Helene death toll nears 200, deadliest in mainland U.S. since Katrina
The devastating impact of Hurricane Helene is still being felt across the South as the death toll rises to almost 200. Communities across the region continue to struggle without vital supplies such as food, water and gas. NBC’s Sam Brock reports and the "TODAY" show’s Dylan Dreyer shares the forecast.
A North Carolina mountain town is wrecked by Hurricane Helene
Reporting from SWANNANOA, North Carolina
SWANNANOA, N.C. — Flattened homes, impassable roads, swamped fields, downed power lines, raw emotions.
Nearly a week after Helene pummeled this small mountain town 20 miles east of Asheville, residents and business owners were trickling back yesterday to see what was left and what could be salvaged.
Beverly and Baxter Eller barely escaped the floodwaters that reached eye level as they fled their home of 37 years and drove off in search of higher ground, uncertain if they would ever return.
When they did, they found their home surrounded by a knee-high moat of muddy water, the garage lifted from its foundation and spun around.
As the first victims are identified, North Carolina sheriff warns of 'a lot more to come'
Several days after floodwaters devastated entire communities in western North Carolina, only now are the first few victims being identified — as authorities warn of more to come.
Among them are 7-year-old Michael Drye and his grandparents, Nora and Michael Drye, who were trapped on a roof in Asheville and were swept away by the raging waters when the house collapsed, NBC affiliate WRAL of Raleigh reported last night.
"There is loss of life, and there’s a lot more to come," Nash County Sheriff Keith Stone told the station. "We’re still in the early stages of it."
Authorities are also facing the problem of not being able to identify bodies — some have no identification and are found miles from their home, Stone said. A forensic investigation is then launched by the coroner's office in such cases to find out who it is.
At Asheville’s Mission Hospital, workers describe the dire conditions after the storm
Facing what could be months without a steady water supply, the only solution for Mission Hospital was to dig a well.
The Asheville, North Carolina, hospital was crippled after fast-moving Helene dumped a record amount of rain in the region over the weekend.
“The entire water infrastructure to the area was obliterated,” said Hannah Drummond, a nurse at the hospital and the chief nurse representative for National Nurses United, the union that represents nurses at Mission Hospital.
The sewage system was so backed up after the storm, Drummond said, that it wasn’t possible to flush toilets.
“We were pooping in bags and buckets,” she said.
Flood insurance coverage lowest in counties hit hardest by Helene
By the time many homeowners realize they need flood insurance, it’s too late. And for tens of thousands in North Carolina and across the Southeast, it’s too late.
Only about 2% of residences in the 100 counties hit hardest by Helene-related power outages were protected by flood insurance, according to an NBC News analysis of Census Bureau data, PowerOutage.us data and National Flood Insurance Program policy data that the insurance company Neptune Flood collected.
Pregnant North Carolina woman survived by clinging to a mattress for eight hours
A pregnant North Carolina woman and her dog held on to a mattress for eight hours to escape the raging floodwaters around her in the aftermath of Helene, in one of the many dramatic stories of survival that have emerged from the state in recent days.
Emily Russell told NBC affiliate WXII of Winston-Salem, North Carolina, that she was alone at home in Swannanoa when she saw her house surrounded by water.“I really thought I was just going to drown in my own house,” she said. “It was literally like you were stuck on an island and I just didn’t know what to do, there was no leaving the house at that point.”
She could see cars and RVs floating past her window and heard part of the house collapse. The water pushed in the front and back doors and within 30 seconds went from the ground to neck level, she recalled.
She and her dog then held on to a mattress while waiting and hoping to be rescued. Her husband, David, finally reached them at 6 p.m. the same day.
She knows of others, however, who did not make it out and died in the floods.
More than 1 million energy customers without power one week after Helene made landfall
While progress has been made in reconnecting the millions of energy customers who were cut off in the immediate aftermath of Hurricane Helene on Sept. 26, there were still more than 1 million in the dark as of 4 a.m. ET today, according to PowerOutage.us.
Almost 400,000 of those are in South Carolina, specifically in the mountains and foothills in the western part of the state, which has been devastated by floods.
Some 300,000 customers are without power in North Carolina, as well as 264,000 in Georgia.
Biden, Harris tour storm-ravaged regions in the Southeast
Reporting from WASHINGTON
President Biden and Vice President Harris toured parts of the storm zone ravaged by Helene. With the election less than five weeks away, the campaigns face several challenges, including the devastation from Helene and the escalating conflict in the Middle East. NBC News’ Gabe Gutierrez reports.