The Mercury News

Monster Michael

Third-strongest hurricane ever to hit US mainland slams into Florida

- By Kevin Begos, Mark Berman, Luz Lazo and Joel Achenbach

Late-blooming and suddenly historic Hurricane Michael smashed into the Florida Panhandle on Wednesday afternoon with roof-peeling winds of 155 mph and a storm surge that scraped homes from their foundation­s. An October surprise that raced across the Gulf, Michael could go down in the record books as the third-strongest hurricane to hit the continenta­l United States.

“We’re kind of getting crushed,” Franklin County Sheriff A.J. Smith said as the storm came ashore west of Apalachico­la. “It’s horrific.”

The first confirmed report of a storm-

related fatality came in Wednesday night, when officials in Gadsden County, near Tallahasse­e, said that a man was found dead in his home after a tree crashed through the roof during the storm. There appeared to be a swath of significan­t damage that stretched from the coast to areas well inland, with Michael’s winds snapping trees, toppling power lines and in some cases obliterati­ng homes.

The powerful eastern side of the storm clobbered the modest coastal community of Mexico Beach, where some structures disintegra­ted into piles of wood amid massive waves and heavy flooding. In nearby Panama City, homes were shredded and boats tossed. In Marianna, Florida, about 18 miles south of the Alabama state line, Michael’s eye tore through the community.

“I had a yard full of 20-inch pine trees and there’s not one left standing,” said Chad Taylor, 66, a land manager in Marianna. “I can see for miles and miles,” he added, quoting the rock band the Who. “Marianna’s destroyed.”

Power outages soared through the day, reaching more than 300,000 by Wednesday evening, with nearly 90 percent of Bay County — home to Mexico Beach and Panama City — losing power. Nearby Liberty County had 81 percent of accounts without power, the state reported.

Bay Medical Sacred Heart hospital in Panama City reported on Twitter that it suffered blown-out windows, a cracked wall and roof damage, and had shifted patients to safe areas while the hospital ran on generator power.

The bayfront city of Apalachico­la, Florida’s oyster capital, suffered severe flooding and property damage along aptly named Water Street, home to several restaurant­s. The city was temporaril­y cut off from the rest of the state, with U.S. Highway 98 to the west blocked by pine trees and oak branches; going east was unthinkabl­e because the causeway had vanished under the elevated water of Apalachico­la Bay.

Smith, the Franklin County sheriff, said the county-run hospital had closed, and ambulance staff had evacuated — to his dismay.

“I don’t get it,” Smith said Wednesday morning. “Would I like to get out of here? Heck yeah. Am I leaving? No.”

Former Franklin County planner Alan Pierce said after the storm blew through that the area endured a storm surge as high as 10 feet. Officials were still trying to determine damage on barrier islands, including St. George Island, which has a state park, a small central business district and a gated community of luxury homes.

“It’s bad,” Pierce said. He noted that the wind gauge at the county airport blew off after recording gusts of 90 mph.

Other states felt the storm’s impact as it moved deeper into the Southeast. Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey closed state offices and buildings in more than a dozen counties. North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper declared the second statewide state of emergency in as many months. He said the storm could do damage in areas still reeling from the flooding Hurricane Florence caused in September, with housing repairs there still in the early stages.

“I’ve seen a lot blue tarps as I’ve traveled across the state,” Cooper said. “These tropical storm force winds could cause a lot of problems.”

Cooper announced a plan for $1.5 billion in additional state funding to cover part of the estimated $13 billion cost of Hurricane Florence. He is requesting legislator­s approve a $750 million down payment for the recovery package when they return to Raleigh next week to resume a special session called after the disaster. He said the total cost of the storm is likely to surpass the costs of hurricanes Matthew (2016) and Floyd (1999) combined.

Michael seemed to have caught everyone off guard, from meteorolog­ists who study tropical cyclones to the longtime residents who chose to hunker down rather than evacuate.

A mere tropical depression just three days earlier, Michael intensifie­d explosivel­y as it rolled north in the warm Gulf of Mexico and into the shallow waters of the continenta­l shelf. It was ultimately a Category 4 storm on the Saffir-Simpson scale, just a couple of miles per hour shy of reaching Category 5.

It was the most powerful tropical storm ever to hit the Florida Panhandle since record-keeping began in 1851. Just two hurricanes have ever hit the U.S. with barometric pressure readings in the eye — a key metric of a storm’s effects — lower than the 919 millibars of Michael. They were the 1935 Labor Day storm (892 mb) that struck the Florida Keys, and Hurricane Camille (900 mb), which killed hundreds when it hit coastal Mississipp­i in 1969.

“This storm went from a tropical storm to a projected Cat 3 at landfall in 6 hours yesterday,” Brad Kieserman, vice president for disaster operations and logistics for American Red Cross, said in a teleconfer­ence Wednesday. “It’s not behaving normally. It intensifie­d extremely quickly. It didn’t give anyone time to do much. And the one thing you can’t get back in a disaster is time.”

President Donald Trump said of the hurricane: “It’s like a big tornado, a massive tornado.” He said the storm “grew into a monster.”

The storm’s path and the need for emergency management potentiall­y carried political significan­ce for Republican Gov. Rick Scott, who is running for the U.S. Senate against Democratic incumbent Bill Nelson, and for Tallahasse­e Mayor Andrew Gillum, a Democrat who is seeking to succeed Scott in a contest against Republican Ron DeSantis.

“We’re turning 100 percent of our focus on searchand-rescue and recovery,” Scott said in a late-day news briefing.

The governor said he’s received reports of “significan­t” damage at Tyndall Air Force Base as well as in Panama City, Mexico Beach and throughout Bay County. Two “devastatin­g tornadoes” touched down in Gaston County, he said.

“We are deploying a massive wave of responses by land, air and sea,” he said.

 ?? GERALD HERBERT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A storm chaser climbs into his vehicle to retrieve equipment under a collapsed hotel canopy after Hurricane Michael reached landfall in Panama City Beach, Fla., on Wednesday.
GERALD HERBERT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A storm chaser climbs into his vehicle to retrieve equipment under a collapsed hotel canopy after Hurricane Michael reached landfall in Panama City Beach, Fla., on Wednesday.
 ?? JOE RAEDLE — GETTY IMAGES ?? Jane Lindsey tries to salvage her dolls from the water running into her store after Hurricane Michael passed through Panama City, Fla. The hurricane hit the Florida Panhandle with 155 mph winds.
JOE RAEDLE — GETTY IMAGES Jane Lindsey tries to salvage her dolls from the water running into her store after Hurricane Michael passed through Panama City, Fla. The hurricane hit the Florida Panhandle with 155 mph winds.
 ?? DOUGLAS R. CLIFFORD — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Boats lay sunk and damaged Wednesday at the marina in Port St. Joe, Fla. Supercharg­ed by abnormally warm waters in the Gulf of Mexico, Hurricane Michael slammed into the Florida Panhandle with winds of 155 mph Wednesday.
DOUGLAS R. CLIFFORD — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Boats lay sunk and damaged Wednesday at the marina in Port St. Joe, Fla. Supercharg­ed by abnormally warm waters in the Gulf of Mexico, Hurricane Michael slammed into the Florida Panhandle with winds of 155 mph Wednesday.
 ?? PEDRO PORTAL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Haley Nelson inspects damage to her family properties in Panama City, Fla., after Hurricane Michael made landfall in Florida’s Panhandle on Wednesday. The hurricane splintered homes and submerged neighborho­ods before continuing its march inland.
PEDRO PORTAL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Haley Nelson inspects damage to her family properties in Panama City, Fla., after Hurricane Michael made landfall in Florida’s Panhandle on Wednesday. The hurricane splintered homes and submerged neighborho­ods before continuing its march inland.

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