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As a hurricane approaches, most people are putting up storm shutters and making plans to get out of the way. But there are some who head straight into the storm.
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State regulators have given Florida Power & Light the go ahead to raise rates. FPL says it needs the cash to pay for damage related to Hurricane Matthew.
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Florida Power and Light is asking the state for a temporary rate hike to recover costs from Hurricane Matthew. FPL says it will divide the $318 million collected between covering costs and replenishing its storm reserve.
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Central Floridians hit hard by Hurricane Matthew have less than one week to request help from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).
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Hurricane Matthew killed as many as 1,000 people in Haiti before barreling up the East Coast of Florida. Pastor Francis Myrtil is a member of Orlando’s Hatian community and has a church on back on the Island. Pastor Myrtil explains how the government and aid organizations are in a disagreement over where relief funds should go.
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A group of Florida nurses has landed in Port-au-Prince Haiti for a medical relief mission after Hurricane Matthew devastated the country. Members of the Haitian American Nurses Association and fellow volunteers made their way to the country's southwest peninsula to establish pop-up clinics in three badly hit rural areas.
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Volusia County is warning residents to be on the lookout for scams and price gouging after Hurricane Matthew.
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Haitians across central Florida are pulling together resources after Hurricane Matthew devastated part of Haiti, killing more than 1,000 people there. Local churches, residents, and government officials are preparing to send medical and construction supplies and food.
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Volusia County residents likened the heavy wind and rain from Hurricane Matthew to a train plowing through the area. More than 200,000 people there lost power due to the storm. Property assessors project flooding and damage to cost millions of dollars. Here, we head to Daytona’s beach side where residents were hit hard from the storm.
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More than a million Floridians woke up without power Saturday morning. That includes hundreds of thousands of residents across central Florida starting their weekend by cleaning up after the storm.