- Travis County is raising property taxes to pay for past and future floods
- Many ask where the hurricanes are this season as the Atlantic remains quiet
- Texas passed laws to address historic flooding. We asked a flood expert if they'll work.
- A city in Brunswick County is still repairing after Hurricane Florence
- Stein calls For $13.5 billion In new funding from Congress for Hurricane Helene Recovery
Houston Non-Profit Races to Save Florida’s Bees after Hurricane Michael

Rescue Bank’s first shipment of 52,000 gallons of high fructose corn syrup arrived in the Florida Panhandle on Thursday morning.
Hurricane Michael wiped out the food supply for bee colonies across the Florida Panhandle. Now a Houston non-profit is racing to keep them from starving.
Florida beekeepers send colonies all over the country to help pollinate crops. Florida itself is the nation’s largest citrus producer, and the bees are critical to the harvest.
“The high winds of Hurricane Michael, when they came through the Florida Panhandle area, stripped all of the natural bee forage from the plants,” said John Kane, development director of Rescue Bank. “They were faced with tens of thousands of colonies starving for lack of any local food.” Roughly 50,000 colonies containing more than 1 billion bees are now at risk.
Rescue Bank, a program of GreaterGood.org, has begun shipping tanker trucks full of donated high-fructose corn syrup to the region. “With the help of our donors, with the help of Archer Daniels Midland, Cargill, and the Smucker Company, we’re keeping a steady stream of trucks rolling into the area,” Kane said.
The effort will continue for about a month, until enough plant life grows back to sustain the bees.