ASHEVILLE, N.C. — Before Hurricane Helene's landfall last week, the National Weather Service began an all-out blitz to alert emergency planners, first responders and residents across the Southeast that the storm's heavy rains and high winds could bring disaster hundreds of miles from the coast.
Warnings blared phrases such as ''URGENT,'' ''life threatening'' and ''catastrophic'' describing the impending perils as far inland as the mountains of North Carolina and Tennessee. Smartphones buzzed with repeated push alerts of flash floods and dangerous winds. States of emergency were declared from Florida to Virginia. And the weather service reached back to 1916 for a precedent, correctly predicting Helene would rank among the ''most significant weather events'' the Asheville, North Carolina, area had ever seen.
But the red flags and cataclysmic forecasts weren't enough to prevent the still-rising death toll. The number has soared to at least 215 across six states. At least 72 of those were in hard-hit Asheville and surrounding Buncombe County from flash floods, mudslides, falling trees, crumbled roads and other calamities.
''Despite the dire, dire predictions, the impacts were probably even worse than we expected,'' said Steve Wilkinson, the meteorologist in charge of the National Weather Service's regional office in Greenville-Spartanburg, South Carolina.
''We reserve this strong language for only the worst situations,'' he said. ''But it's hard to go out and tell people this is going to totally change the landscape of western North Carolina.''
As the region begins its long road to recovery, a task complicated by cut-off communities, a lack of running water and still-spotty cellphone service, the growing number of casualties has prompted soul-searching among devastated homeowners and officials alike. They wonder whether more could have been done to sound the alarms and respond in a mountainous region that's not often in the path of hurricanes.
''It sounds stupid to say this, but I didn't realize it would be like bombs going off,'' Brenton Murrell said after surveying his Asheville neighborhood strewn with mud and debris, military Osprey aircraft whirring overhead. ''It's like a war zone.''
Like many residents interviewed by The Associated Press, Murrell had never experienced the effects of a hurricane and felt detached from the danger despite receiving numerous warnings of ''extreme risk of loss of life and property.''