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The storm made landfall earlier this week as a strong category 3 and left a path of destruction in its wake.
The storm destroyed homes, flooded streets, and even dropped a tree on Florida Governor Ron DeSantis' house in Tallahassee.
The storm plowed into the Big Bend area of the state with catastrophic winds and flooding.
More than 30 counties in Florida have declared a state of emergency in anticipation of dangerous winds and storm surge.
This is the first storm of the Atlantic hurricane season to make landfall over the U.S.
The storm made landfall in Mexico, swept over California, and has now moved on to Nevada.
Hilary has strengthened into a hurricane this week and will bring heavy precipitation to the West Coast and Southwest in a few days.
Over 1,000 people are still missing and the number of deaths is likely to continue rising, officials say.
The wildfires in Maui are some of the deadliest fires that the U.S. has seen in about a century.
Due to high ocean temperatures this year, we could see anywhere from 14 to 21 hurricanes form in the Atlantic ocean, the agency said.
The death toll continues to rise as the destructive fires burn homes, historical sites, and vehicles to the ground.
The Lone Star State has hit record-high power usage nine times this summer alone. It's had little respite from the heat this year. The grid is straining.
Thousands are still without power, more than 250 structures have burned to the ground, and emergency services are overwhelmed.
A series of heavy rainfall, thunderstorms, and strong wind flooded streets and felled power lines from Georgia to New York.
Heavy rain, gusty wind, and hail are in the forecast for nearly the entire East Coast on Monday.
The first helicopter landed safely, but the second aircraft crashed in Riverside County. The NTSB is investigating.
Smoke from this year’s perilous wildfire season has lowered air quality in Canada, the U.S. and beyond.
The invasive critters are originally from Asia, and local officials are trying to stop their spread out of L.A. county.
Blame climate change for the dangerous heat, and record-breaking temperatures.
Jackie Caplan-Auerbach from Western Washington University shared data that paints Swift's July 22 and July 23 as the equivalent of a 2.3 magnitude earthquake.