Maritimers in Florida brace for Hurricane Milton - Action News
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Maritimers in Florida brace for Hurricane Milton

Residents of Florida, some with connections to the Maritimes, are preparing for Hurricane Milton, a dangerous Category 4 storm, set to hitlate Wednesday on the heels of Hurricane Helene.

Bathurst native Cyndi Edwards says residents still struggling to clean up after Hurricane Helene

A satellite photo shows a swirling hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico.
In this satellite photo, Hurricane Milton can be seen off the Yucatan Peninsula on Tuesday afternoon. (NOAA/NHC)

Residents of Florida, some with connections to the Maritimes, are preparingforHurricane Milton, a dangerous Category 4 storm, set to hitlate Wednesdayon the heels of Hurricane Helene.

Trevor Adams, who worked for CBC News as a meteorologist in the Maritimes over the summer, lives in the Tampa Bay area.

Adams left his home early Tuesday, at around 5:30 a.m., to try tobeat the traffic and get to a friend's house in Fort Lauderdale, after people were told they should leave the area.

"It was a sea of red lights," he said. "The roads were packed full of people leaving."

Heavy traffic snaking its way along a highway.
Heavy traffic is seen on Interstate 275 South as residents evacuate St. Petersburg, Fla., ahead of Hurricane Milton on Oct. 7. When Trevor Adams left his home at 5:30 a.m. Tuesday, he said the roads were packed. (Octavio Jones/Reuters)

Adams said the storm is a "sign of the times," explaining how the Gulf of Mexico water temperatures are the source of fuel for these extreme storms.

"It's the price you pay for wanting to live here.But at the same time, it's hard to comprehend how something could be so enormous and so destructive."

Unusually warm waters brought on by the burning of fossil fuels, a practice that is leading to climate changeaccording to scientists, is the reason behind these rapidly intensifying storms.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center said Milton isexpected to make landfall on the Florida Gulf Coast late Wednesday, with winds beginning to increase along the West Coast of Florida by Wednesday afternoon.

Meteorologist in Florida reacts to impact of large storms

3 days ago
Duration 5:07
Hurricane Milton is expected to hit Florida on Wednesday after Hurricane Helene battered parts of the state last week. Tom Murphy interviewed Tampa Bay meteorologist Trevor Adams about these storms.

More than a million people have been ordered to evacuatefrom areas in the path of the storm.

Cyndi Edwards, originally from Bathurst, lives and works in Florida as a TV host. Her residence is just outside of Tampa, and she has four vacation properties on the barrier islands.

"We've been in Florida since 2006 and I'll tell you truthfully, most people are pretty nonchalant when it comes to hurricanes," she said on Information Morning Fredericton. "They always say, 'Oh yeah, well, never hits us directly, we've been lucky, I'm not evacuating,' so on and so forth.

"Well, this time, I mean, the mayor said, if you don't get out, you're going to die."

A Maritimer living in Florida spoke with Jeanne Armstrong as Hurricane Milton prepares to make landfall.

Edwards said she thinks people understood that warning for the most part, especially those in the zones closest to the coast. While Edwards's home is in one of the less crucial zones, she is still concerned about flooding and the potential for a long stretch with no power. Buther bigger worry isher island properties.

A bedroom with toppled furniture and muddy floors
Only two weeks ago, the devastating Hurricane Helene caused widespread destruction and death. Cyndi Edwards's property on Bradenton Beach was hit hard, destroying the contents of the home. (Submitted by Cyndi Edwards)

Making the storm even worse is the fact that it comes only two weeks after Hurricane Helene.

Edwards's place on Bradenton Beach, south of Tampa,is ground level and a storm surge destroyed everythingfrom the drywall to the floors to the appliances, which she said are still in front of the unit, along with the contents of other people's homes and condos.

"When this next storm comes, all that stuff is just going to be projectiles," she said.

Adams said cleanup efforts from Helene were unfortunately in vain, since it will all need to be redone once Milton hits.

He said there are garbage piles that can be compared to the snow banks that Maritimers might be familiar with in mall parking lots during the winter.

Two images of debris outside a home
Edwards said a lot of the stuff that was destroyed in her condo during Helene is likely still outside the home. (Submitted by Cyndi Edwards)
.

Adams said his mother lives in a retirement community, about10 minutes from his home, and a number of people are walking away and not expecting to goback.

"The sad part is, there's a number of people that live in that community that have nowhere to go," he said.

"They've been told to leave, and they've got nowhere to go. They don't have family, they don't have resources.

"We think about from Helene, the number of deaths. Well, that's a consideration for this particular storm, Milton, you know, how many people will lose their lives? And that's just the reality."

With files from Information Morning Saint John, Fredericton