Florida officials give evacuation orders as Hurricane Milton closes in

ByJulia Reinstein ABCNews logo
Tuesday, October 8, 2024 6:07PM

Florida officials are urging residents to evacuate now as Hurricane Milton and sets its sights on the state's west coast.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis warned residents ahead of landfall to take evacuation orders seriously.

"Time is going to start running out very, very soon," he said at a news conference Monday.

Several counties on Florida's west coast are under mandatory evacuation orders, including Charlotte, Citrus, Collier, Hernando, Hillsborough, Lee, Levy, Manatee, Pasco, Pinellas, Sarasota, St. Johns and Volusia. Voluntary orders have also been given in some counties, including Glades, Dixie, Hardee, Miami-Dade, Okeechobee and Union. All evacuation orders are listed on Florida's Division of Emergency Management website.

"Please, if you're in the Tampa Bay area, you need to evacuate," Kevin Guthrie, executive director of Florida Emergency Management, urged at the news conference. "Drowning deaths due to storm surge are 100% preventable if you leave."

On Tuesday, Tampa Police Chief Lee Bercaw warned that Hurricane Milton would be "the storm of the century."

"We've never seen anything like this before," Bercaw said.

President Joe Biden echoed the grim warning on Tuesday, stressing that evacuation was "a matter of life and death."

"This could be the worst storm in Florida in over a century, and God willing, it won't be, but that's what it's looking like right now," Biden said.

Florida's Division of Emergency Management said in a post on X that shuttles would be available for certain counties.

"10/8 there will be free shuttles operating in Pinellas, Pasco & Hillsborough counties assisting with #Milton evacuations to shelters," the post read.

The agency also said it had teamed up with Uber for rides to and from shelters in evacuating counties.

"We have partnered w/@Uber to provide Floridians free rides to & from shelters in counties evacuating for #Milton," the post read.

More than 50 counties in Florida are now under state of emergency orders.

The storm is expected to weaken, but will still be a major Category 3 hurricane by the time it makes landfall in Florida late Wednesday night or early Thursday morning.

"If you live in a storm surge evacuation zone and you're asked to leave by your local officials, please do that," Michael Brennan, the director of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Hurricane Center, told ABC News Live on Sunday. "You don't have to drive hundreds of miles to get to a safe place, often just tens of miles to get inland, out of that evacuation zone, to a shelter, a friend or loved one's home."

Brennan also urged Floridians to prepare a disaster kit with several days' worth of nonperishable food, water, medicine and batteries.

Ahead of landfall on Monday, President Joe Biden approved an emergency declaration for the state to allow federal assistance to begin supplementing local efforts.

Flooding is expected, and storm surge is a significant threat.

A record-breaking storm surge of 8 to 12 feet is expected in the Tampa Bay area, as Floridians continue cleaning up from the 6 to 8 feet of storm surge that was just brought on by Hurricane Helene.

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