Historic Flooding, Power Outages and Debris From Hurricane Milton Forced Tampa Law Firms to Go Remote
The St. Petersburg office of Johnson Pope was damaged by a collapsed crane, but other area law firms expect to resume business as usual Monday morning.
October 11, 2024 at 06:17 PM
3 minute read
What You Need to Know
- In preparation for Hurricane Milton, many Tampa area law firms went fully remote, but expect to be back in the office Monday.
- One building in St. Petersburg bearing the name of a local law firm took a hit from a falling crane.
- None of the law firms contacted for comment reported any injuries to its lawyers or staff.
Hurricane Milton, in addition to leaving behind an official death toll of 16 people as of Friday afternoon, sent a crane flying down into a St. Petersburg, Florida, building bearing the name of a local law firm.
The hurricane initially made landfall Wednesday night near Sarasota, causing flooding, power outages and damage brought on by its destructive wind force. St. Petersburg bore some of that damage after the storm ripped the roof off Tropicana Field, home of the Tampa Bay Rays, and sent a crane flying down into the home of Johnson Pope Bokor Ruppel & Burns, a full-service law firm specifically serving the Tampa Bay area.
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