Upstream | June 25, 2012 | 13 comments

Tropical storm Debby: Up to 25 inches of rain drenches parts of Florida

JanforGore
Tropical Storm Debby drenched Florida with heavy rains, flooded low-lying neighborhoods and knocked out power to thousands of homes and businesses as it lingered off the state's coast Monday.

The governor declared a statewide emergency, and a tropical storm warning was in effect for most of Florida's Gulf coast. At least one person was killed by a twister in Florida, and crews in Alabama searched for a man who disappeared in rough surf Sunday.

In St. Pete Beach on Florida's Gulf coast, a tornado ripped the roof off a marina and an apartment complex, and felled fences, trees and signs.

PHOTOS: Tropical Storm Debby
State officials estimated at least 35,000 homes and businesses were without power.

The storm closed the sole bridge to St. George Island, a popular vacation island in Florida. Power was already out on the island and authorities said it could be for days.

"The tourists cleared out. It's not a good thing and hurts the economy during a week in peak season," said Patrick Sparks, 26, a manager at Eddy Teach's bar. "It's a tropical storm — it's not even a category one (hurricane). It's a little rash to send everyone home."

Residents in several counties near the crook of Florida's elbow were urged to leave low-lying neighborhoods because of the threat of flooding. Shelters were opened in some areas.

High winds forced the closure of an interstate bridge that spans Tampa Bay and links St. Petersburg with areas to the southeast. In several locations, homes and businesses were damaged by high winds authorities believe were from tornadoes.

The constant barrage of wind and rain triggered fears of the widespread flooding that occurred across the Florida Panhandle during Hurricane Dennis in 2005.

Debby's center was essentially stationary about 50 miles south of Apalachicola. Debby's top sustained winds were around 45 mph with little change in strength expected over the next day or so. The forecast map indicated the storm would crawl northeast, eventually coming ashore in Florida later this week. However, a storm's path is difficult to discern days in advance.

Underscoring the unpredictable nature of tropical storms, forecasters at one point thought Debby would head west toward Texas.

"There are always going to be errors in making predictions. There is never going to be a perfect forecast," said Chris Landsea, a meteorologist at the National Hurricane Center.

The storm is moving slowly, allowing its clouds more time to unload rain. A public advisory said parts of northern Florida could get 10 to 15 inches of rain, with some areas getting as much as 25 inches.

The Highlands County Sheriff's Office said several tornadoes moved through the area southeast of Tampa, damaging homes.

Sheriff's office spokeswoman Nell Hays said a woman was found dead in a house in Venus that was destroyed in the storm. A child found in the same house was taken to the hospital.

No further information was available on the child's condition or either person's age.

In Orange Beach, Alabama, fire and rescue workers searched for a South Carolina man who was vacationing with his family when he went under. His name and hometown were not immediately released.

As of Sunday, 23 percent of oil and gas production in the region had been suspended, according to a government hurricane response team. Employees have been evacuated from 13 drilling rigs and 61 production platforms in the Gulf of Mexico.

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13 comments // Tropical storm Debby: Up to 25 inches of rain drenches parts of Florida

  • JanforGore
    • +3
      JanforGore  
    • http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/debby-hovers-gulf-florida-rain-16649352

      More about flooding and rains. There was so much nothing happening that a State of Emergency was declared and two people died because of it.
      ~~~~~

      "Parts of the main interstate highway across northern Florida were closed by flooding Tuesday as Tropical Storm Debby hung stubbornly offshore over the Gulf of Mexico, threatening up to two feet of rain in places.

      After raking Florida's Gulf coast with high winds and heavy rain, Debby promised to bring more of the same in the coming days as it drifted on a path forecast to take it over the state and east into the Atlantic by Friday.

      The National Hurricane Center said Debby was about 85 miles west of Cedar Key, Fla., and moving eastward near 3 mph. It had maximum sustained winds near 45 mph, barely tropical-storm status.

      But the wind, high surf and relentless rain have made the storm's presence felt.

      The Florida Highway Patrol closed portions of Interstate 10 in north Florida early Tuesday due to flooding caused by rain. Troopers reported several areas of flooding on a roughly 50-mile stretch of the east-west interstate east of where it crosses I-75 and the agency warned motorists to use extreme caution on other parts of the highway.

      South of that stretch of I-10, four puppies and a young dog drowned when a swollen creek flooded an animal shelter in the city of Starke. The Florida Times-Union reported that officials placed sandbags and dug trenches outside to protect the shelter, but the water rose quickly Sunday night.

      Farther south, in the Tampa Bay area, roads such as Tampa's Bayshore Boulevard were washed out. Residents tried to salvage belongings from flooded homes in low-lying areas. At one point Monday, high winds and flooding concerns prompted authorities to close two major routes over Tampa Bay into St. Petersburg: the Howard Frankland Bridge from Tampa and the Sunshine Skyway from the southeast.

      Before nightfall, Debbie had dumped more than a foot of rain on some parts over the previous 96 hours. And forecasters were expecting the rains to continue, bringing another 4 to 8 inches across northern Florida.

      Torrential rains and flooding would continue across parts of the Florida Panhandle and northern Florida for several days, even though the storm wasn't expected to gain strength.

      "The widespread flooding is the biggest concern," said Florida Emergency Operations Center spokeswoman Julie Roberts. "It's a concern that Debby is going to be around for the next couple of days, and while it sits there, it's going to continue to drop rain. The longer it sits, the more rain we get."

    • 11 months ago
  • AJILIVIZION
    • +1
      AJILIVIZION  
    • Image
    • I live in Tampa now. The last 48 hours have been filled with Tornado & Flood Warnings, not that anything serious seems to have happened anywhere near me... that I know of. Starting to feel a little stuck inside as Debby takes her time moving up the coast.

    • 11 months ago
  • attilatheblond
  • JanforGore
    • +1
      JanforGore  
    • attilatheblond:

      So far one casualty that has been reported. I hope people are taking it seriously. Just because it is categorized as a tropical storm does not mean it isn't dangerous. I hope you hear from your friends soon.

    • 11 months ago
  • AJILIVIZION
    • 0
      AJILIVIZION  
    • attilatheblond:

      I live in Tampa :D The rain and winds have been intense but I haven't seen or heard anything too threatening. I was even able to go run some chores in the afternoon, before another round of rain came around. I think the ugliest parts of the storm wondered right over our heads, so your friends should be fine.

    • 11 months ago
  • attilatheblond
  • JanforGore
  • AJILIVIZION
    • 0
      AJILIVIZION  
    • JanforGore:

      I live more inland, in the Brandon area, which is East of the City. Bayshore Boulevard is literally a street that runs down the Tampa "bay-shore". This tropical storm was definitely under-estimated simply because of how slow it has been moving combined with the amount of rain it has produced. I feel differently about what is going on now than I did 15 hours ago. That said, I still think my area is relatively safe.

    • 11 months ago
  • JanforGore
  • JanforGore
  • JanforGore
    • +3
      JanforGore  
    • "It's a tropical storm — it's not even a category one (hurricane). It's a little rash to send everyone home."

      This is something we need to change... our perception of these labels and what they bring in a world of extreme climate change.

    • 11 months ago
  • LivingPong
    • +1
      LivingPong  
    • JanforGore:

      When a big storm hit last week a couple of customers wanted to drive off in the middle of the storm. Luckily a huge tree prevented them by falling across the driveway with no other route of escape. In spite of the tree also bringing down the power lines, they wanted to try and attempt to drive around it. I told them they weren't going anywhere until the tree was removed because of the danger of electrocution. The power had actually gone out, but with huge trees and limbs falling on the road I thought it best they wait until the storm had abated and the tree and electric lines removed.

      I was shocked how little responsibility they showed for their own safety. It was if we were responsible for the situation and they would of acted as instructed. They seemed more worried that they couldn't drive home when they wanted. Luckily the tree was removed in less than an hour and emergency services had already cleared the road back to town of debris, rather remarkable considering much of the south of the state had been pounded and was in rather a mess.

      The loss of goods and revenue over the next few days was a small price to pay for the lack of deaths caused by the storm. Unfortunately though one man fell to his death helping clean up his neighbours wrecked home after their roof was torn off. It is incredible no one was hit by a falling tree considering it happened during the day when many people were driving on the roads.

    • 11 months ago
  • JanforGore
    • +1
      JanforGore  
    • LivingPong:

      The same thing happened here. During the storm we had before the one we had yesterday power lines fell on the street I live on. The fire dept. came and put tape across the road and people in cars were actually trying to drive under it because they didn't want to take another route as if there was no danger. And the rain we had yesterday was like a tropical storm. So much rain in such little time with so many tree branches stripped. If this indeed is the norm now, people need to truly understand what this is all about.

    • 11 months ago
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