Current:Home > FinanceTampa Bay area gets serious flooding but again dodges a direct hit from a major hurricane. -Keystone Growth Academy
Tampa Bay area gets serious flooding but again dodges a direct hit from a major hurricane.
View
Date:2025-04-11 18:34:29
Last year it was Hurricane Ian that drew a bead on Tampa Bay before abruptly shifting east to strike southwest Florida more than 130 miles (210 kilometers) away. This time it was Hurricane Idalia, which caused some serious flooding as it sideswiped the area but packed much more punch at landfall Wednesday, miles to the north.
In fact, the Tampa Bay area hasn’t been hit directly by a major hurricane for more than a century. The last time it happened, there were just a few hundred thousand people living in the region, compared with more than 3 million today.
“Tampa Bay avoided the worst again,” Brian McNoldy, a senior research associate at the University of Miami’s Rosenstiel School of Marine, Atmospheric and Earth Science, said via email. “A lot of it comes down to luck. It’s happened before ( 1848, 1921 ) and will happen again.”
Many in the area live in low-lying neighborhoods that are highly vulnerable to storm surge and flooding they have rarely before experienced, which some experts say could be worsened by the effects of climate change. In such an event, water would bulldoze its way into the relatively shallow bay from the Gulf of Mexico, also not very deep.
“Since the city is nothing like what it was a hundred years ago, the impacts now would be unimaginable. Tampa Bay is shaped and aligned perfectly to allow for huge storm surge,” McNoldy said.
That vulnerability was apparent as Idalia swept past, with storm surge swamping neighborhoods and busy roads, triggering shutdowns of some bridges between Tampa and the St. Petersburg area. Access to barrier islands was temporarily shut off, and several dozen people had to be rescued from flooded homes.
“Make no mistake, this hurricane left its mark,” St. Petersburg Mayor Ken Welch said at a news conference. “The reality is we are not done dealing with the consequences of this major storm.”
Still, it could have been much worse. The storm surge in Tampa Bay was far lower than the levels experienced when Idalia came ashore Wednesday morning as a Category 3 storm near the rural town of Steinhatchee in the Big Bend region.
“We have thankfully not suffered a great deal of damage in our community,” Tampa Mayor Jane Castor said at a Wednesday news conference. “The city of Tampa expects to be open for business tomorrow at 8 a.m.”
The last time Tampa Bay was hit by a major storm was Oct. 25, 1921, by a hurricane that had no official name but is known as the Tarpon Springs storm for the seaside town famed for its sponge-diving docks and Greek heritage.
The storm surge from that hurricane, a Category 3 with estimated winds of up to 129 mph (207 kmh), was 11 feet (3.3 meters). At least eight people died, and damage was estimated at $5 million at the time.
Now the tourist-friendly region known for its sugar-sand beaches has grown by leaps and bounds, with homes and businesses occupying prime waterfront real estate.
The city of Tampa had about 51,000 residents in 1920. Today, there are almost 385,000. Most other cities have experienced similar explosive growth.
Nancy Brindley, 88, has been through around three dozen tropical storms and has lived in Indian Rocks Beach, outside of St. Petersburg, since 1970 in a beachside house that has been a gathering spot for three generations of family and friends. That’s where she rode out Huricane Idalia with relatives.
Brindley “absolutely” thinks the Tampa Bay area seems to have some special protection, saying, “It’s just a perfect place in so many ways.”
“I think that in this region, that meant that you had all the fish you needed in the bay and you had the Gulfstream (current) that wasn’t too close to you. Fisherman called it the golden triangle. The sweet spot,” Brindley said.
A report from the Boston-based catastrophe modeling firm Karen Clark and Co. concluded in 2015 that Tampa Bay is the most vulnerable place in the U.S. to storm surge flooding and could sustain $175 billion in damage from a major event. A World Bank study a few years earlier rated Tampa as the planet’s seventh-most vulnerable city to major storms.
Yet for years storms have bypassed it. Phil Klotzbach, a research scientist in the Department of Atmospheric Science at Colorado State University, noted that only one of five hurricanes that hit Florida at Category 3 strength or higher has come ashore in Tampa Bay since 1851.
“In general, cyclones moving over the Gulf of Mexico had a tendency of passing well north of Tampa,” the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration said in a report on the 1921 storm.
Also lurking in the waves and wind are the impacts of climate change and the higher sea levels scientists say it is causing.
“Due to global warming, global climate models predict hurricanes will likely cause more intense rainfall and have an increased coastal flood risk due to higher storm surge caused by rising seas,” Angela Colbert, a scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, wrote in a June 2022 report.
Amid all the science, a local legend has it that blessings from Native Americans who called the region home have largely protected it from major storms for centuries. Many mounds were built by the Tocobagan tribe in what is now Pinellas County that some believe are meant as guardians against invaders, including hurricanes.
Rui Farias, executive director of the St. Petersburg Museum of History, told the Tampa Bay Times after Hurricane Irma’s near miss in 2017 that many people still believe it.
“It’s almost like when a myth becomes history,” Farias said. “As time goes on, it comes true.”
veryGood! (9177)
Related
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- 75-year-old John Force alert after fiery crash at Virginia Motorsports Park
- 2024 College World Series highlights: Tennessee beats Texas A&M, forces Game 3
- Gunmen kill 15 police officers and several civilians in Russia’s southern Dagestan region
- FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
- Justin Timberlake says it's been 'tough week' amid DWI arrest: 'I know I’m hard to love'
- Bisexuals: You’re valid members of the LGBTQ+ community no matter who you’re dating
- Scottie Scheffler wins PGA Tour event after 6 climate protesters run onto 18th green and spray powder
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Video shows choking raccoon being saved by friends camping in Michigan
Ranking
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- COVID summer wave grows, especially in West, with new variant LB.1 on the rise
- Former first lady Melania Trump stays out of the public eye as Donald Trump runs for president
- The Real World's Sarah Becker Dead at 52
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Zach Edey mock draft: Where will star Purdue basketball center go in 2024 NBA Draft?
- Six protesters run onto 18th green and spray powder, delaying finish of Travelers Championship
- Bisexuals: You’re valid members of the LGBTQ+ community no matter who you’re dating
Recommendation
Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
Did you receive an unsolicited Temu or Amazon package? It might be a brushing scam.
Scottie Scheffler wins PGA Tour event after 6 climate protesters run onto 18th green and spray powder
Trump will address influential evangelicals who back him but want to see a national abortion ban
NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
Dali cargo ship leaves Baltimore for Virginia, nearly 3 months after bridge collapse
New Mexico heavy rain and flash flooding prompt mandatory evacuations in Las Vegas
Stanley Cup Final Game 7 Panthers vs. Oilers: Predictions, odds, how to watch