‘It’s a tough life right now’: Perry residents line up for aid amid Helene’s catastrophic damage

PERRY, Fla. – Helene landed Thursday night in Florida’s Taylor County as a Category 4 hurricane. A man in Steinhatchee said he heard “a constant loud roar” for hours, as the invasive storm surge and the pounding rain caused widespread devastation in the Gulf coastal community. The force tossed boats like toys.

In Taylor County’s Perry, dozens of residents with a working car, gas, and access to clear roads waited in line on Saturday morning near semi-trailer trucks full of aid by a Convoy of Hope, a disaster relief organization founded in California and based in Missouri.

“Stores are shut down, power is out. It’s a tough life right now,” said Ethan Forhetz, of Convoy of Hope.

At least 52 deaths and billions in property damage were attributed to Helene in Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia. The victims included a mother and her 1-month-old twin babies.

Many residents who did not evacuate coastal communities said they still didn’t have cell service or electricity on Saturday. Michael Presley Bobbitt, a novelist, said entire houses had vanished in Levy County’s Cedar Key, an island city off the northwest coast of Florida.

Here are more videos of Helene’s impact:

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Local 10 News Reporter Christian De La Rosa contributed to this report from Steinhatchee, Fla. Torres contributed to this report from the Local 10 News Weather Authority studios in Pembroke Park, Fla.


About the Authors

Saira Anwer joined the Local 10 News team in July 2018. Saira is two-time Emmy-nominated reporter and comes to South Florida from Madison, Wisconsin, where she was working as a reporter and anchor.

The Emmy Award-winning journalist joined the Local 10 News team in 2013. She wrote for the Miami Herald for more than 9 years and won a Green Eyeshade Award.

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