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Monday September 09, 2024

US braces for ‘catastrophic’ flooding as Storm Debby drenches Florida

By AFP
August 06, 2024
A person walks through a flooded street caused by the rain and storm surge from Hurricane Debby in Cedar Key, Florida on August 05, 2024. — AFP
A person walks through a flooded street caused by the rain and storm surge from Hurricane Debby in Cedar Key, Florida on August 05, 2024. — AFP 

MIAMI: At least one person was killed as Tropical Storm Debby began dumping what could become historic levels of rain over Florida on Monday, with the southeastern United States braced for potentially “catastrophic” flooding.

A 13-year-old boy died when a tree was blown onto a mobile home in Levy County, the sheriff´s office there said, after Debby made landfall on Florida´s Gulf Coast earlier in the day as a Category One hurricane.

Authorities say the danger remains high as the storm moves over the state and into Georgia and South Carolina, despite the downgrade by the National Hurricane Centre. “This is a level four out of four risk for excessive rainfall,” Michael Brennan, director of the NHC, told reporters.

“We´re going to see the center of the system just crawl along the southeast coast of the United States for two to three days. “This is going to result in a prolonged extreme rainfall event with potential for catastrophic flooding across coastal portions of Georgia, South Carolina, even extending up into North Carolina,” he said.

Florida governor Ron DeSantis also warned of “significant” flooding over the coming days, and said the state had already seen storm surge and some water rising. More than 300,000 customers have lost electricity so far, according to tracker poweroutage.us.

“We have a lot of restoration personnel ready to go to get it back on,” DeSantis said. The National Hurricane Centre warned of life-threatening storm surges along the Gulf coast, with up to six feed (1.8 meters) of inundation above ground level in some areas.

The storm will probably cause catastrophic flooding with “potentially historic heavy rainfall” when Debby moves northeast across Georgia and South Carolina over the next few days, the NHC said.