US Southeast Faces Catastrophic Cleanup After Helene as Tennessee Dam Failure Fears Escalate
Atlanta, Sept 28 – The southeastern United States continues to reel from the aftermath of Hurricane Helene, with the death toll rising and fears mounting over a potential dam failure in eastern Tennessee. The region faces a daunting cleanup operation, as residents grapple with widespread destruction and loss of life.
Helene, which made landfall in Florida as a Category 4 hurricane, has left at least 50 people dead across five states, with search and rescue operations still ongoing. In Tennessee, concerns over the Nolichucky Dam have triggered evacuation warnings. The dam, which sustained significant cracks due to the storm’s heavy rainfall, is at risk of failure, endangering communities downstream along the Nolichucky River. The river has risen by 17 feet above pre-storm levels, prompting fears of catastrophic flooding if the dam gives way.
Authorities have been working around the clock to ensure the safety of residents, urging immediate evacuations while monitoring the structural integrity of the dam. The United States Geological Survey (USGS) is closely tracking water levels and assessing the risk.
Across the southeastern U.S., from Florida to the Carolinas, recovery efforts are underway as the region deals with the fallout from one of the most powerful storms in recent memory. The damage estimates are staggering, ranging between $95 billion and $110 billion, making Helene one of the most expensive hurricanes in U.S. history, according to AccuWeather’s chief meteorologist, Jonathan Porter.
Florida has been hit the hardest, with entire neighborhoods flattened, roads washed away, and coastal areas still submerged from storm surges. Many of the storm’s victims perished when trees collapsed on homes or were caught in flash floods. In Tennessee and North Carolina, search teams continue to comb through the wreckage, particularly in areas hardest hit by flash flooding and high winds.
In the days ahead, attention will remain focused on the ongoing risk of the Tennessee dam failure, as well as the monumental task of rebuilding lives and communities across the southeastern U.S.