Beryl, Helene and Milton retired from hurricane name lists
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UPI |
The retirement of hurricane names is an important process that helps remember the impact of devastating storms and honor its victims.
Dallas Morning News |
Hurricanes Helene, Milton and Beryl were so nasty last year that their names are being retired.
Yahoo |
Brianna, Holly, Miguel will replace Beryl, Helene and Milton on the rotating list of hurricane names.
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Rays on track for Tropicana Field return in 2026
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The Associated Press |
The St. Petersburg City Council voted 7-1 to approve $22.5 million to begin the repairs at Tropicana Field, which will start with a membrane roof that must be in place before other work can continue....
Yahoo |
Leaders in St. Petersburg plan to decide Thursday whether to spend nearly $23 million on repairs to Tropicana Field.
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Hurricane Milton was tied for the 4th strongest Atlantic hurricane on record by pressure. The final NOAA report is in with all the details.
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TCPalm on MSNStorm name Milton retired; Hurricane Center report details its tornadoes on Treasure CoastUnited Nations and U.S. weather monitoring agencies have retired Milton as a recurring tropical storm name, citing the "death and destruction" it caused, as well as three other devastating storms to form in the Atlantic during the 2024 hurricane season.
This year’s hurricane season could be quieter than last year's. Here’s what you should know from the first big hurricane season outlook of the year.
Last year was a busy hurricane season with storm after storm racing across the Caribbean, bringing multiple storms ashore in Florida, ravaging rains to the Carolina mountains and strong winds to downtown Houston; another robust season is likely to occur in the Atlantic in 2025.
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Forecasters predict an above-average 2025 Atlantic hurricane season with 17 named storms and 9 hurricanes, driven by warmer ocean temperatures.
Early predictions point to an active hurricane season in the Atlantic Ocean. Here's what local residents should know.
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Axios on MSNHurricane Milton wrecked the roof, but St. Petersburg City Theatre's 100th season went onSmack in the middle of its centennial season, Hurricane Milton's record-breaking winds blew a chunk of the roof off St. Petersburg City Theatre. Rain drenched the stage and flooded the green room. Murky water sloshed around a back hallway lined with cinderblocks decorated with the names of plays and musicals staged there over the years.