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Thousands of Florida gas stations are out of fuel. Here’s how long it could take to resupply.

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Florida drivers waited in long lines and in some cases came up empty trying to refuel their vehicles evacuating during Hurricane Milton. 

As of Friday morning, almost 29% of the Florida’s gas stations were sold out, according to GasBuddy gas analyst Patrick De Haan. That means roughly 2,320 of the state’s nearly 8,000 stations were out of fuel Friday morning. 

“It may get slightly worse before it starts getting better,” he said on social media site X.

Seventy-three percent of stations in the Tampa and St. Petersburg areas were without gas, according to GasBuddy. In Sarasota, 54% of stations were empty, followed by 42% of stations in Fort Myers and Naples, 40% of stations in Gainesville and 34% of stations in Orlando and Daytona Beach, according to the site’s fuel tracker

Fuel supplies are incoming, but experts still say that motorists who don’t need gas should wait to visit a station. 

“If you don’t need to go to the gas station, don’t,” Andrew Lipow, president of Lipow Oil Associates told CBS MoneyWatch. “You should not be running out to fill up.”

How long will it take to refuel?

Most of Orlando’s gas supply is delivered through the port of Tampa, where there are 10 operating terminals. Major oil companies’ gas is then shipped to Orlando through a pipeline. The port is still working to restore power to the terminals so that they can receive supplies, Lipow explained. 

“You need to get workers, terminal operators and truck drivers back, and the Coast Guard needs to inspect the channel for debris, and replace any navigational buoys. All that stuff is happening as we speak,” he said. In his estimation, gas deliveries by tankers won’t happen until Sunday at the earliest. 

Ports that serve the rest of Florida are open, he noted. 

“It’s going to get better. They are going to get gas,” he said. “There is a lot of gas headed to Florida, but the biggest impediment right now to resupply is getting electricity back to the Port of Tampa.”

Tom Kloza, global head of energy analysis at Oil Price Information Service (OPIS), said he expects the “gas crisis” to be fully resolved within 72 hours.

“By Tuesday or Wednesday, it will be back to normal,” he told CBS MoneyWatch. 



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Recovery efforts underway in aftermath of Hurricane Milton

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Recovery efforts underway in aftermath of Hurricane Milton – CBS News


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More than 1,600 people have been rescued since Hurricane Milton struck Florida. The storm is blamed for at least 16 deaths. CBS News flew with the Florida State Guard Friday over Siesta Key, where Milton made landfall. From above, the devastation seemed limitless, a vast landscape of twisted metal and debris. Nicole Valdes and Rob Marciano report.

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Why some people in Hurricane Helene’s path didn’t get emergency alerts

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Zoe Dadian’s front yard became a front line when the remnants of Hurricane Helene caused catastrophic flooding in her community of Swannanoa, North Carolina.

“It’s just like a horror show, just standing there on solid ground while full houses floated by with people sitting on top, like screaming for their lives,” Dadian said.

When the floodwaters receded, neighbors started talking about the warnings that came before.

Severe weather watches and warnings are sent by the National Weather Service, but evacuation orders come from local authorities.

Many use the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s Integrated Public Alert and Warning System — or IPAWS — which pushes messages to cellphones, TVs and radios in disaster-impacted areas.

Buncombe County, where Dadian lives, sent a mandatory evacuation order out through IPAWS at 6:15 a.m. on Sept. 27.

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She said the alert didn’t show up on her phone until hours later — at 1 p.m.

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“And at that point, the landslide had occurred,” Dadian said. “We were digging bodies out of rubble, and there was nowhere to evacuate.”

Buncombe County officials said many cell towers were down because of the flooding, which may have delayed the transmission of the evacuation order.

“The cell towers are a critical piece,” FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell said about the challenge of timely alerts during flash floods.

“We need to keep learning on how we can better warn people even if we don’t know exactly where the flash flooding’s going to happen,” Criswell said.

A damaged car sits under a destroyed shed after flooding caused by Hurricane Helene in Swannanoa, North Carolina, on Oct. 3, 2024.
A damaged car sits under a destroyed shed after flooding caused by Hurricane Helene in Swannanoa, North Carolina, on Oct. 3, 2024.

Ulysse Bellier/AFP via Getty Images


While downed cell towers may have stopped or delayed alerts from reaching everyone, some counties certified to issue IPAWS alerts did not send any, according to a CBS News analysis of available FEMA data. Of 43 counties that experienced deaths during Helene, 29 did not send out alerts using IPAWS.

Brian Toolan, Connecticut’s former emergency operations chief who now builds local alert software, said a county, especially small counties, can get overwhelmed quickly.

“The timelines are going to be critical to understand was there enough time to get an alert out, you know, was there enough time to prepare, you know, and if not, you know, how do we learn from this and make sure this doesn’t happen again?” he said.

CBS News also reviewed FEMA data during Hurricane Milton. At least 46 alerts were sent this week by 14 counties across Florida, including those along the west coast where the storm made landfall and conditions were the most dangerous. At least 25 alerted residents to evacuations.


Family survived tornado before Hurricane Milton hit

05:24

When counties do send out critical warnings, phones have to be set up to receive them.

If government emergency notifications are turned off, people won’t get alerts sent through IPAWS. If notifications are turned on, people will get IPAWS alerts.

Some counties don’t only use IPAWS. They have their own alert systems that require people to opt in. People won’t get those alerts unless they’ve signed up in advance.

On Dadian’s phone, notifications were turned on, but she wishes she’d known sooner what was going to happen to her community.

“Never in a million years,” Dadian said, “did I imagine that it was going to be something that we weren’t going to be able to weather.”



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Why this 93-year-old has not missed a single high school football game since 1946

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Why this 93-year-old has not missed a single high school football game since 1946 – CBS News


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Steve Young, 93, has not missed a single Antioch Community High School football game since 1946. He also attends virtually every school sporting event, from basketball to golf, and has no plans on stopping anytime soon. Steve Hartman has more in “On the Road.”

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