One individual was useless and two had been lacking in western Alaska on Monday (October 13, 2025) after the remnants of Typhoon Halong over the weekend introduced hurricane-force winds and ravaging storm surges and floodwaters that swept some houses away, authorities mentioned.

More than 50 individuals had been rescued — some plucked from rooftops.

Officials warned of an extended street to restoration and a necessity for continued assist for the hardest-hit communities, with winter simply across the nook. A U.S. Coast Guard official, Capt. Christopher Culpepper, described the scenario within the villages of Kipnuk and Kwigillingok as “absolute devastation.” Elsewhere within the U.S., extreme climate killed a girl in New York City who was struck by a photo voltaic panel, and the Columbus Day Parade there additionally was cancelled.

Rescuers within the Phoenix space discovered the physique of a person whose truck was swept away by floodwaters, and crews in southern California ready for potential mudslides in fire-ravaged areas.

Communities tally the toll on Alaska villages

Alaska State Troopers mentioned not less than 51 individuals and two canines had been rescued in Kipnuk and Kwigillingok after the storm system walloped the communities. Both areas noticed important storm surge, in keeping with the National Weather Service.

A lady was discovered useless and two individuals remained unaccounted for in Kwigillingok, troopers mentioned. The company earlier mentioned it was working to substantiate secondhand experiences of people that had been unaccounted for in Kipnuk, however late Monday (October 13, 2025), mentioned troopers had decided nobody there was lacking.

According to the nonprofit Coastal Villages Region Fund, many of the residents in each communities had taken shelter in native colleges.

In addition to housing issues, residents impacted by the system throughout the area reported energy outages, a scarcity of working water, subsistence meals stocked in freezers ruined and injury to home-heating stoves. That injury may make the winter tough in distant communities the place individuals retailer meals from looking and fishing to assist make it via the season.

‘The worst I’ve ever seen’

Jamie Jenkins, 42, who lives in one other hard-hit neighborhood, Napakiak, mentioned the storm was “the worst I’ve ever seen.” She described howling winds and fast-rising waters Sunday morning.

Her mom — whose close by house shifted on its basis — and a neighbour whose house flooded came visiting to Jenkins’ place. They tried to attend out the storm, she mentioned, however when the waters reached their prime stairs, they received in a ship and evacuated to the college.

Ms. Jenkins mentioned “virtually the entire neighborhood” was there. The males on the town gathered their boats and went home to deal with to choose up anybody else who was nonetheless of their houses, she mentioned.

Adaline Pete, who lives in one other neighborhood, Kotlik, mentioned she had by no means skilled winds so robust earlier than. An unoccupied home subsequent door flipped over, however she mentioned her household felt secure of their house.

Republican senators assist restoration, resilience funds

During a information convention organised by Gov. Mike Dunleavy, Alaska’s two U.S. senators, Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan, mentioned they’d proceed to deal with local weather resilience and infrastructure funds for Alaska.

Mr. Sullivan mentioned it was the congressional delegation’s job to make sure the Trump administration and their colleagues understood the significance of such funds.

Earlier this 12 months, the Federal Emergency Management Agency mentioned it could finish a program geared toward mitigating catastrophe dangers. The choice is being challenged in court docket.

Ms. Murkowski mentioned erosion mitigation initiatives take time to finish. “But our actuality is, we’re seeing these storms coming … definitely on a extra frequent foundation, and the depth that we’re seeing appears to be accumulating as properly, and so the time to behave on it’s now as a result of it’s going to take us a while to get these in place,” she mentioned of such initiatives.

About 380 individuals dwell in Kwigillingok, a predominately Alaska Native neighborhood on the western shore of Kuskokwim Bay and close to the mouth of the Kuskokwim River.

A report ready for the native tribe in 2022 by the Alaska Institute for Justice mentioned the frequency and severity of flooding within the low-lying area had elevated lately. The report listed relocation of the neighborhood as an pressing want.

Erosion and melting permafrost pose threats to infrastructure and in some circumstances whole communities in Alaska, which is experiencing the impacts of local weather change.

California crews put together for mudslides

In California, rescue crews with helicopters and bulldozers had been being pre-positioned close to wildfire burn areas to answer potential particles flows and mudslides as a serious storm takes goal on the state.

A flood watch was issued beginning late Monday for a lot of Southern California, the place a number of inches of rain had been doable via Tuesday (October 14, 2025). To the north, as much as 3 ft of mountain snow was predicted for components of the Sierra Nevada.

Intense rain pummels a part of Arizona

A microburst and thunderstorm hit town of Tempe, Arizona, on Monday (October 13, 2025), dropping a few half-inch of rain inside 10 minutes, the National Weather Service mentioned. Weather service meteorologist Katherine Berislavich mentioned a microburst — when a storm collapses on itself and pushes out at excessive wind speeds — may be mistaken for a twister due to the injury it could actually trigger.

The storm brought on important injury, together with uprooting bushes that toppled onto automobiles and buildings, and dropping them on streets and sidewalks. A enterprise complicated had its roof torn off, and 1000’s of houses misplaced energy.

Heavy rain drenched a lot of the state, inundating parking tons and often dry washes and leaving residential areas trying like rivers.