Florida
DeSantis: Florida sets up fuel sites in Plant City, Bradenton and St. Pete. More to come
PLANT CITY — Three fuel distribution sites have been set up by the state in the wake of Hurricane Milton in an effort to alleviate problems getting fuel, as many gas stations are still without power or simply out of fuel.
And Gov. Ron DeSantis promised that more will be opened as needed.
DeSantis spoke of the fuel program during a 30-minute news conference at Plant City Stadium, one of the three distribution sites currently open. One is also open in Bradenton and another in St. Petersburg.
“We’re in the process of doing more,” DeSantis said. “We’re going to do another one closer to the heart of Tampa in Hillsborough County. We’re going to do another one in a different part of Pinellas County and we’re going to do at least one in Sarasota County and perhaps some more depending on the demand that we have.”
DeSantis said the loss of power is one of the major issues.
“When you have power out at gas stations, you can’t pump fuel,” he said. “When you have ports that are interrupted, they don’t get the shipments in as much. So we have a lot of fuel that we brought into Florida to be able to help and get people through it as we get back, and the private sector resolves the issue. So we stockpiled a lot of fuel. We’ve activated a lot of our fuel contracts and we want to be able to give people an option.
“I see a lot of people waiting in line at the gas stations that do have power, and these are really long lines,” he said. “And when the port of Tampa is open, you’re going to see the fuel flowing. But in the meantime, we want to give people another option.”
Joe Graham and his wife, Lecinda, of Plant City were among the people taking advantage of the option. They waited in line all morning to get their 10 gallons as cars were lined up more than a mile from the stadium. At least one car ran out of gas inside the stadium before it could reach the pump.
Joe Graham runs a group home in Tampa, and getting fuel is just part of his efforts.
“We have no water, we have not lights,” he said. “It’s really hard trying to get staff to come in. A lot of them are flooded out. We‘re doing this on a daily basis, so always trying to find out what the next deal is going to be. Right now, we’re trying to get this little gas because there’s no gas in the gas station.”
Initially, 250,000 gallons of gasoline and 250,000 gallons of diesel was on site, but more fuel will arrive as needed, according to Bill Smith of World Kinect Services. The Miami-based corporation is contracted with the Florida Division of Emergency Management to provide fuel. He said the site is expected to be open for days between 10 a.m. and 7 p.m.
The fuel is free, but each person is limited to 10 gallons.
“These public fuel sites, although we have done fuel support in the past, we’ve never done it to this scale, and that is on top of the amount of fuel that we provided directly to service stations,” DeSantis said.
DeSantis said the state put 400,000 gallons of diesel into the supply chain and 500,000 gallons of gasoline. He said there were 31 sites for emergency fuel distribution for first responders, health care workers and other critical personal.
The state, DeSantis said, still has 1.8 million gallons of diesel and more a million gallons of gasoline that will be used at the fuel depots until the fuel situation is resolved.
“We have Florida ports that are actively receiving shipments like Port Tampa Bay,” DeSantis said. “Additional vessels are en route, they are filling up the trucks and we’re bringing them to where they need to be.”
One terminal filled 531 trucks Friday, and the Florida Highway Patrol is escorting the tankers from the ports to the respective service stations.
“If you see a gas station is out, most of that is, they don’t have power,” DeSantis said. “Now, they may also need to get their fuel shipment as well. But if they don’t have power to be able to run the pumps, then it’s an academic issue.”
DeSantis said generators can be deployed to gas stations if they’re going to be without power for an extended period.
Hurricane Milton’s hit: How will it affect our insurance premiums in Florida?
“A lot of these gas stations, quite frankly, are supposed to have generators,” he said. “Very few of them have used them that I’ve seen, especially in the areas that were the hardest hit.”
DeSantis said he is optimistic that the stations that do not have power will be “getting power in relatively short order in the coming days.” Until then, DeSantis said the state sites will help fill the void.
“You’re going to have more of these state-run sites that are going to be available,” he said. “We understand particularly to get people through the weekend. We want to be able to do, use the fuel reserves that we provided and get those into people’s tanks.”
Kevin Guthrie, the executive director for the Florida Division of Emergency Management, said more fuel has been coming into the state. As of noon Saturday, four different ports were offloading 37.3 million gallons of fuel that will be pumped into the distribution lines and immediately be available.
(This story was changed to include more photos.)
Florida
11 Most Charming Towns In Florida
Florida’s most distinctive small towns don’t run on beaches alone. St. Augustine traces its history back to 1565 and still preserves Spanish colonial architecture in the old town. Tarpon Springs grew up around Greek sponge diving and still serves octopus at restaurants along its docks. Havana up in the Panhandle was named for its Cuban cigar tobacco trade. The other eight Florida towns ahead each hold equally specific stories that the bigger cities don’t tell.
St. Augustine
Pedro Menéndez de Avilés founded St. Augustine in 1565, making it the oldest continuously occupied European settlement in the continental United States. The town anchors Florida’s history with Spanish colonial architecture stamped into the old town and the Castillo de San Marcos National Monument on the waterfront. Construction on the Castillo finished in 1695, and the seashell coquina walls famously absorbed cannonballs rather than shattering. St. George Street runs as a pedestrian-only spine through the historic district, with the Old City Gates at the north end and an arcade of cafes, shops and the Saint Photios National Shrine in between. The beaches stretch about 42 miles along the Atlantic side of St. Johns County.
Key West
Key West sits at Mile Zero of US Route 1, about 90 miles from Cuba and 160 miles south of Miami. The historic district along Duval Street covers a one-mile walkable strip between the Gulf and Atlantic sides of the island. Ernest Hemingway lived here between 1931 and 1939 at the Ernest Hemingway Home and Museum, where the descendants of his six-toed cats still roam the grounds. The Truman Little White House served as President Truman’s working vacation home during 175 days of his presidency. Each evening the Mallory Square sunset celebration brings street performers, food carts and crowds for the daily Gulf-side sunset.
Gainesville
Gainesville isn’t a beach town. Home to the University of Florida, the city sits inland in north-central Florida about 90 minutes from the Atlantic coast. Paynes Prairie Preserve State Park covers more than 21,000 acres of savanna just south of town, where wild bison and Spanish horses roam free across the only place in Florida where you can see them in the wild. Ginnie Springs runs some of the clearest blue spring water in the state with snorkeling, diving and tubing on the Santa Fe River. About 20 miles north in Alachua, the Mill Creek Farm Retirement Home for Horses lets visitors bring carrots and meet rescued horses spending their final years on the farm.
Palm Beach
Palm Beach occupies a narrow barrier island between the Atlantic Ocean and Lake Worth Lagoon, just across the Royal Park Bridge from West Palm Beach. The island stretches about 16 miles and houses roughly 9,000 year-round residents, with a population that swells significantly during winter. Worth Avenue runs the high-end commercial district with Lilly Pulitzer’s flagship boutique, Tiffany, and a row of Mediterranean Revival arcades laid out in the 1920s. Henry Flagler’s 75-room Whitehall mansion, completed in 1902, now operates as the Flagler Museum and covers his role in opening Florida to tourism through the Florida East Coast Railway. The Breakers, Palm Beach’s century-old beachfront resort, remains one of the most photographed hotels in the state.
DeFuniak Springs
DeFuniak Springs in Walton County takes its name from Frederick DeFuniak, once president of the Pensacola and Atlantic Railroad. The town’s defining feature is Lake DeFuniak, a roughly circular spring-fed lake that locals describe as one of only two perfectly round natural lakes in the world. A walking path circles the entire lake, with Victorian-era homes facing the water from a green park ring. Chautauqua Vineyards and Winery, named for the Chautauqua education movement that held annual meetings in town between 1885 and 1928, runs daily wine tastings on the property. The 1909 Chautauqua Hall of Brotherhood still hosts community events.
Havana
Havana sits about 14 miles northwest of Tallahassee on the Florida-Georgia state line and takes its name from the Cuban cigar tobacco trade. The town was the center of a roughly 100-year shade tobacco boom that supplied wrapper leaves for premium cigars, with operations dominating local life until the industry collapsed in the late 1960s and the last small crop was harvested in 1977. The Shade Tobacco Museum operates today inside the Planters Exchange, a National Historic Landmark from 1926 that now houses antique shops alongside the museum exhibits. Antique dealers and art galleries have revived the historic brick downtown since the 1980s. The town runs as a day trip from Tallahassee with restaurants and shops occupying the converted tobacco warehouses.
Dunedin
Dunedin sits about 25 miles west of Tampa on the Gulf Coast and was settled by Scottish immigrants in the late 1800s. The name is the Scottish Gaelic word for Edinburgh, and the town still hosts the Dunedin Highland Games each spring. The Toronto Blue Jays operate their spring training facility here. Honeymoon Island State Park sits at the end of the Dunedin Causeway with about four miles of white-sand beach, and a ferry from Honeymoon Island reaches Caladesi Island State Park, accessible only by boat and ranked the number one beach in America by Dr. Beach (Stephen Leatherman) in 2008. Downtown Dunedin runs a walkable Main Street with breweries, restaurants like Pisces Sushi and Global Bistro, and the Pinellas Trail running through.
Tarpon Springs
Tarpon Springs sits about 30 miles north of Tampa on the Gulf Coast and runs the highest per-capita Greek population in the United States. Greek sponge divers arrived from the island of Kalymnos starting in 1905, and the Sponge Docks along Dodecanese Boulevard still operate as the commercial center, mixing working sponge boats with Greek restaurants, bakeries and sponge shops. Costas Restaurant, Hellas, Mykonos and Dimitri’s on the Water all serve Greek cuisine and grilled octopus within a block of the docks. The town’s St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Cathedral hosts the country’s largest Greek Orthodox Epiphany celebration each January 6, with a cross-diving ceremony in Spring Bayou. Fred Howard Park covers 155 acres on a causeway with a Gulf-side beach at the end.
Fernandina Beach
Fernandina Beach sits at the northern tip of Amelia Island and is the northernmost city on Florida’s Atlantic coast. The 13-mile island earned the nickname “Isle of Eight Flags” because eight different national flags have flown over it since the 1500s, including Spanish, French, British, Confederate and American. The Centre Street historic downtown carries Victorian commercial buildings with restaurants, art galleries and the Florida House Inn, dating to 1857 as one of Florida’s oldest operating inns. Main Beach Park anchors the Atlantic side with a wide stretch of sand and pavilions. The town’s pirate history runs deep, including a brief 1817 takeover by Scottish-born adventurer Gregor MacGregor under a self-declared “Republic of Florida” flag.
Ponce Inlet
Ponce Inlet sits at the southern tip of a barrier island south of Daytona Beach. Ponce de Leon Inlet Light Station, completed in 1887 and originally called the Mosquito Inlet Lighthouse, climbs 175 feet from base to top and 203 steps to the observation deck. The light is Florida’s tallest lighthouse and the second tallest in the United States. The Marine Science Center, run by Volusia County, rehabilitates injured sea turtles and birds and runs touch tanks and exhibits on local marine ecology. The beaches around Ponce Inlet are known for some of the strongest surf along the central Florida coast.
Anna Maria
Anna Maria sits at the northern tip of Anna Maria Island, a seven-mile barrier island in Manatee County between Tampa Bay and Sarasota Bay. The city itself counts about 1,000 year-round residents and shares the island with the larger Holmes Beach and Bradenton Beach. Pine Avenue runs the historic commercial spine, with wooden buildings in pastel colors housing local restaurants and shops, and has been promoted as the “Greenest Little Main Street in America” because many of the buildings incorporate sustainable design features. The Anna Maria City Pier was destroyed by Hurricane Irma in 2017 and rebuilt in 2020, and now extends back into the bay as a free fishing and walking pier. The Sandbar Restaurant and Pine Avenue’s smaller cafes anchor the local dining scene.
Beyond Florida’s Big Cities
Florida’s most distinctive small towns each hold layers that the bigger destinations skip past. St. Augustine carries Spanish colonial history older than anything else in the country. Tarpon Springs runs the Greek sponge industry as a living tradition. Fernandina Beach trades on pirates and eight national flags. The other eight towns above add their own equally specific histories. Pick one and stay long enough to find them.
Florida
7 of our favorite Florida restaurants in Vero Beach and Fellsmere
TCPalm staff share their top restaurant recommendations in Vero Beach, Sebastian, Fellsmere.
Indian River County is home to many unique restaurants, far too many to choose from.
There are so many restaurants on the Treasure Coast to try, but it can be hard knowing where to start.
Here are the TCPalm staff’s recommendations for restaurants in Vero Beach, Sebastian and Fellsmere.
Indian River County restaurant recommendations
Olivia Franklin is TCPalm’s trending reporter. You can contact her at olivia.franklin@tcpalm.com, 317-627-8048 or follow her on X @Livvvvv_5.
Florida
Pilot program aims to build $200K homes in Central Florida to help low-income families buy, not rent
ORLANDO, Fla. – For many Central Florida families, the dream of owning a home feels further out of reach than ever.
With the median home price now topping $400,000, a new pilot program in Orlando is trying to change that by building new homes for about half the cost.
A lot off Quill Avenue in Parramore may not look like much right now, but organizers say it could soon be the site of a new home priced around $200,000 for low-income families.
“We just really wanted an opportunity to bring actual affordable housing to people who have basically been forever renters,” said Satrina Whithead with the GXVE Homes Initiative.
The GXVE Homes Initiative says the goal is to help families earning between $16,000 and $65,000 a year get a chance at homeownership. Whithead said the homes could range from 500 to 1,400 square feet, depending on the lot size and location.
The Orlando Regional Realtor Association reports the median home price in the area is now more than $400,000. Whithead said GXVE hopes to sell homes for about half that.
“There’s nothing wrong with profit, but at the end of the day, I want to help where the need is greatest,” Whithead said.
Organizers say they are already planning to build in Parramore and are working to close on two additional properties. They also say they have properties planned in Sanford and Mims, with a goal of bringing eight homes a year to Central Florida.
“You can pay 80 percent of your salary on rent just to have a place to live. So getting that number back down to around 50 percent is extremely important,” said Mike Harris, vice president of GXVE Homes.
Florida Made Tiny Homes, which is partnering with the organization, said it plans to build concrete homes that exceed safety requirements for the area.
“I don’t think there’s going to be anything available on the market in that price range, much less new construction,” said Dylan Grace, co-founder of Florida Made Tiny Homes.
Program organizers say they expect to start construction in the fall and hope to complete the first home within six to eight months after work begins. For more information please click here.
Copyright 2026 by WKMG ClickOrlando – All rights reserved.
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