Milton ‘explosively intensifies’ into Category 5 hurricane, triggers storm surge warnings for Florida’s Gulf Coast

The Mexican government has issued a hurricane warning for the Yucatan Peninsula coast from Celestún to Rio Lagartos.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said Monday that an around-the-clock operation to clear debris and fallen trees from Helene was underway ahead of Milton’s arrival to minimize the threat from flying objects. He said Milton is expected to make landfall in Hillsborough or Pinellas County on Wednesday evening, and he pre-emptively issued emergency declarations for 51 counties.
Pinellas County, which occupies the Tampa Bay peninsula and its Atlantic-facing coast, has begun mandatory evacuations, according to a sheriff’s notice.
County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri said Monday’s that the evacuations cover a half-million people — a majority of the county’s population.
Hillsborough County issued a mandatory evacuation order for Evacuation Zones A and B, for all mobile homes and for manufactured housing starting at 2:30 p.m. Monday. Those residents should be in safe locations by 7 a.m. Wednesday. Nine shelters will be opened in mandatory evacuation zones.
Sarasota County also called for those in levels A and B (which includes barrier islands) and those in mobile or manufactured homes to evacuate Monday. Those living in level C “should be prepared to evacuate if the storm intensifies.”
In the coastal city of Anna Maria, south of Tampa, a mandatory order started midday.
Tolls have been suspended in West and Central Florida to facilitate evacuations out of the storm’s path.
For a list of all Florida evacuation orders click here.
However, state officials stress that people can leave without an order.
“Have a plan, execute the plan,” DeSantis said Sunday. “You certainly can leave now. You don’t have to wait to get an evacuation order.”
Polk County, to the east of Tampa, has published a list of shelters, including three pet-friendly ones.
Milton is noteworthy for its explosive growth and very unusual path, approaching Florida from the west: Since 1850, only two storms have originated in the Gulf’s Bay of Campeche and made landfall in Florida.
Furthermore, for the first time on record, the Atlantic has three hurricanes simultaneously after September: Kirk, Leslie and Milton.
Milton’s winds, which reached 180 mph Monday, are the strongest for an Atlantic hurricane recorded this late in a season, Klotzbach of Colorado State said on X.
The season runs June 1 through Nov. 30. Only two other Atlantic hurricanes have posted 180 mph winds or greater since 1950, Allen (1980) and Rita (2005), the professor said on X.
Milton is following Hurricane Helene, which brushed by the Tampa Bay region on its way north to landfall in Florida’s Big Bend region Sept. 26. It killed more than 230 people in six states.
Perkins, director of the Pinellas County Emergency Management Department, said Milton could be twice as destructive for Tampa Bay. The last time the region sustained a direct hit from a hurricane was 1921.
“We already had a deadly brush with Helene,” she said, “and Milton is projected to bring … twice the impact from Helene.”
This “will be a hurricane season that none of us will forget,” chair of Pinellas County Commissioners Kathleen Peters said at the news conference. “Be safe, move quickly, and take care of your family.”
Record-warm waters made more likely by climate change will fuel the rapid intensification of Milton as water in the Gulf of Mexico is 2-4 degrees Fahrenheit above average. Rapidly intensifying hurricanes are becoming more common in the warmer world.