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Ian recovery efforts, a mounting death toll and ongoing flooding. Plus: How to build a more resilienIan recovery efforts, a mounting death toll and ongoing flooding. Plus: How to build a more resilient Florida?
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In the aftermath of Hurricane Ian, swaths of standing water are creating access issues in rural Highlands, Hardee and DeSoto counties.
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One neighborhood in Volusia County is cleaning up after flood waters from Hurricane Ian rose into homes after record-breaking rainfall drenched the region.
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Residents in central Florida donned fishing waders, boots and bug spray and canoed or kayaked to their homes on streets where floodwaters continued rising Sunday despite it being four days since Hurricane Ian tore through the state.
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On today’s show, a look at Ian’s impact as we check in with cities across the state. Then later: a former FEMA official brings us up to date on the emergency response effort. Plus: will Florida be able to handle all of the insurance claims now that the storm has passed? And how much is climate change to blame for the stronger and more intense storms the state is facing?
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Water breached the seawall and rushed into the historic city, flooding State Road A1A near the Bridge of Lions and pushing inland toward North Ponce De Leon Boulevard.
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The Harvest Moon makes a return this weekend, setting up the first king tide of the season in South Florida. The high water levels can lead to flooding, even when it’s not raining. Here is the information residents of Broward, Miami-Dade, Palm Beach and Monroe counties need to know.
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The Corps said it's willing to spend another $8.2 million and take up to five years to better coordinate other plans covering drainage, Biscayne Bay and Everglades marsh restoration and beach renourishment.
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As storm flooding worsens, federal report finds Florida has the most to lose along SE Atlantic coastThe 4-year study by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers found storm surge flooding alone could amount to $24 billion annually with three feet of sea rise, thanks to a warming planet.
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NOAA projects that the high tide flood frequency between May 2022 and April 2023 will average 3-7 days, the same as the previous year, but an increase from the 2-6 days expected between 2019 and 2020.
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A good rainstorm can be welcome in dry or drought conditions. But when the ground is parched, rain water can fail to saturate the ground, resulting in the risk for a flash flood.
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Kentucky officials are still working to confirm deaths from the past week's flooding. Hundreds of people have already been displaced.