Fay's 4th Florida Landfall One For The Record Books

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BILL KACZOR | August 23, 2008 11:22 PM EST | AP

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A road sign warns motorists of flood water from Tropical Storm Fay on a street in St. George Island, Fla.,Saturday, Aug. 23, 2008. The storm began wrapping up its disastrous slog across Florida on Saturday by making a record fourth landfall on the Panhandle's coast. (AP Photo/Phil Coale)

APALACHICOLA, Fla. — Tropical Storm Fay was downgraded to a tropical depression Saturday night, but cities along the Gulf Coast were still bracing for heavy rain.

As a tropical storm, Fay set a record with four landfalls in Florida and was blamed for at least 11 deaths there and another in Georgia, emergency officials said.

Though the storm weakened as it traveled inland Saturday, with maximum sustained winds of about 35 mph, cities from Pensacola to storm-wary New Orleans were still preparing for possible flooding.

"People automatically assume that if it weakens, the hazards go down with it, but in the case of rainfall, it's not a function of wind speed," said Jamie Rhome of the National Hurricane Center. "Slow moving systems dump a lot of rainfall."

At 11 p.m. EDT, the tropical depression was 60 miles northeast of Mobile, Ala., and moving west at 8 mph.

The forecast indicates the depression could slow in the next few days and possibly stall over southern Mississippi or eastern Louisiana, Rhome said.

Thousands of homes and businesses in Florida were inundated with flood waters this week as the storm worked its way north from its first landfall in the Florida Keys and zigzagged across the peninsula.

Fay's center made its fourth landfall early Saturday about 15 miles north-northeast of Apalachicola, according to the National Hurricane Center.

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Rains and strong wind gusts blitzed Tallahassee, the state capital, for more than 24 hours, knocking down trees and power lines and cutting electricity to more than 12,000 customers, city officials said.

In southwest Georgia, officials said a boy drowned Saturday while playing in a drainage ditch swollen by 10 to 12 inches of rain.

The storm was expected to move over southern Alabama and Mississippi on Sunday.

The U.S. Coast Guard in Mobile, Ala., closed numerous ports and waterways between Panama City in Florida and the Alabama coast to the east.

Emergency officials in low-lying cities in the storm's path weren't taking any chances.

In Alabama, officials opened shelters in the coastal counties of Mobile and Baldwin. Trucks capable of rescuing people from floodwaters were also in place, said Yasamie Richardson, spokeswoman for the Alabama Emergency Management Agency.

In the New Orleans area, which is approaching the third anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, forecasts called for 1 to 3 inches of rain on the south shore of Lake Pontchartrain. In St. Bernard Parish, site of some of the worst post-Katrina flooding, emergency officials were handing out sandbags Saturday.

City officials in Slidell, La., where forecasters predicted several inches of rain late Sunday and through Monday, said emergency vehicles had been fueled and workers were on call.

Sandbags were also distributed in Ocean Springs, Gulfport and Biloxi on the Mississippi coast. The Air Force Reserve's 403rd Wing evacuated aircraft Saturday from Keesler Air Force Base in Mississippi to locations in South Florida and Texas. The 403rd includes planes known as "hurricane hunters" that officials said would be available to continue to monitor Fay.

The Gulf Islands National Seashore closed a campground area and four barrier islands to the public.

The head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, R. David Paulison, visited the National Hurricane Center in Miami on Saturday to discuss concerns of flooding on the Gulf Coast if the storm continues to creep on its path, a FEMA spokeswoman said.

The 11 people killed in Florida and one in Georgia bring the death toll from Fay to at least 35. A total of 23 died in Haiti and the Dominican Republic from flooding.

Fay's wake caused widespread flooding along Florida's east coast, especially in Jacksonville near the storm's third landfall.

The Office of Insurance Regulation reported Saturday that roughly 6,700 homeowners filed claims, although only some were because of flooding.

Gov. Charlie Crist has asked the federal government to declare the worst-hit areas major disaster areas.

Fay had been an unusual storm since it was named Aug. 15. After hitting the Keys Monday, it crossed open water again before hitting a second time near Naples on the southwest coast. It limped across the state, popped back out into the Atlantic Ocean and struck again near Flagler Beach on the central eastern coast. It was the first storm in almost 50 years to make three landfalls in the state as a tropical storm. Its fourth landfall as such was the first in recorded history.

"This is unprecedented in terms of the slow nature of this storm, the large circulation and the fact that it's impacted probably about 90 percent of the state with heavy rains and severe weather," state meteorologist Ben Nelson said.

___

Associated Press writers Brent Kallestad in Tallahassee, Melissa Nelson in Pensacola, Sarah Larimer in Miami, Russ Bynum in Savannah, Ga., and Alan Sayre in New Orleans contributed to this story.

APALACHICOLA, Fla. — Tropical Storm Fay was downgraded to a tropical depression Saturday night, but cities along the Gulf Coast were still bracing for heavy rain. As a tropical storm, Fay set a...
APALACHICOLA, Fla. — Tropical Storm Fay was downgraded to a tropical depression Saturday night, but cities along the Gulf Coast were still bracing for heavy rain. As a tropical storm, Fay set a...
 
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Such a shame, when it could have been Texas..!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:22 PM on 08/23/2008

When are people going to learn to leave Florida.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:46 PM on 08/23/2008
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why?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:51 PM on 08/23/2008

Watch out Sunshine. Looks like they are trying to make you a non-American just like they did New Orleanians. You see, it is YOUR fault where you live. If it costs them money, all of a sudden you are alien, not a fellow citizen.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:07 PM on 08/23/2008

I wondered when red staters would feel God's wrath for pretending to honor a code of silence.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:06 PM on 08/23/2008
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wth does that even mean?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:10 PM on 08/23/2008

Beldar's 'cone' of silence.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:24 PM on 08/23/2008

Florida is a responsible red state. They pull themselves up by their bootstraps. They will not ask for socialist assistance. No, my friends, they will rebuild on their own. And the Easter Bunny hops on one leg.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:04 PM on 08/23/2008
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Born and raised in FLA, Fay is the least of the Panhandle's problems (although it has been quite a nuisance today)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:44 PM on 08/23/2008

Where are all the fundamentalists who see God's judgement in the weather? Different when nature is pounding their home base in the Florida panhandle.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:28 PM on 08/23/2008
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"Oh, wait, you said Florida. Sorry. Thought this was New Orleans again."

Idiot, the Army Corps of Engineers has apologized for designing and building NO's embarrassingly sub-standard flood walls; there's been incompetence in LA and NO, monumental B*sh Administration corruption and incompetence goes without saying, and we've had decimation of wetlands by oil development. Over a thousand people were killed; it was the worst disaster in U.S. history.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:36 PM on 08/23/2008

It's not the cause or the devastation, it's the behavior after the fact that tells the story.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:16 PM on 08/23/2008

Like SteveZorro trying to look cool by using the suffering of Americans for his own use. Get over yourself.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:56 PM on 08/23/2008

Fay is beating the Floridians because they voted for Hillary. LOL

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:28 PM on 08/23/2008
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so i must not have had much damage bc i voted for kucinich. interesting.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:15 PM on 08/23/2008
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I'm sure all the relatives of those who died will find that very funny.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:06 PM on 08/23/2008

Oh Please give me a break! I'm sick of the complaints about HRC. She's not President, not Vice

President just a Senator from NY who's given most of her life for the good of someone else.

Democrates need to STOP EATING THEIR OWN. GET OVER IT!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:15 AM on 08/24/2008

HEY! Where's the looting, shooting, whining, raping, killing and blaming?

Oh, wait, you said Florida. Sorry. Thought this was New Orleans again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:30 PM on 08/23/2008
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new orleans was ravaged by a class 5 hurricane. we had to deal with a tropical storm. i would hope you would recognize the difference.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:32 PM on 08/23/2008

No it wasn't....I don't think it was even class 3 by the time it hit landfall (never was 5, either). The hurricane didn't do SQUAT to NO....the faulty levee that probby couldn't handle a class 1 flooded the city.

Harry Shearer has written probby 100 HuffPo blog/threads over the last few years...where have you been?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:43 PM on 08/23/2008

Sunshine,
Pomplet doesn't have a clue about hurricanes. He does know how to be a classless ignorant twit though. Hope things dry out for you soon. My thoughts were with you as Fay refused to budge. I know that was misery.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:10 PM on 08/23/2008

If it is one state that the Republicans and Bush makes sure gets FEMA aid, it is Florida. Might have something to do with votes.

Besides comparing Fay to Katrina is unfair. It took several days for Bush frat brother "Brownie" to mobilize FEMA to assist NO and Mississippi. The disdain that Bush administration showed to the gulf states was immoral. Remember Momma Bush saying evacuees were better off living in a Houston stadium than living in NO prior to Katrina? I remember Bush administration officials stating that things weren't so bad in NO even though 1000+ people were dying or had died as they were making this pronouncements.

People did not even have water and food supplies for several days. The people who died in the storm were allowed to decompose next to the living for days. Thousands of people were displaced never to return to NO. The amount of stress related deaths and diseases (akin to PTSD) surrounding victims of Katrina has never been fully documented. We won't even talk about the highly carcinogenic formaldehyde-laced trailers Katrina victims were forced to live in.

Your trivializing what happened in New Orleans is shameful.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:13 PM on 08/23/2008
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Trivializing what's happening in FLA is also shameful.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:08 PM on 08/23/2008

Might have something to do with votes? IT DOES have something:
The facts:

While Bush & McCain were eating cake, New Orleans flooded. Why did it flood? Because Bush stole the money, not once but three times, that was slated to rebuild the levees.

HURRICANE FRANCES HITS FLORIDA:
FROM THE ATLANTIC MAGAZINE November, 2005
"Imagine if, in advance of Hurricane Katrina, thousands of trucks had been waiting with water and ice and medicine and other supplies. Imagine if 4,000 National Guardsmen and an equal number of emergency aid workers from around the country had been moved into place, and five million meals had been ready to serve. Imagine if scores of mobile satellite-communications stations had been prepared to move in instantly, ensuring that rescuers could talk to one another. Imagine if all this had been managed by a federal-and-state task force that not only directed the government response but also helped coordinate the Red Cross, the Salvation Army, and other outside groups.
This requires no imagination: it is exactly what the Bush administration did a year ago when Florida braced for Hurricane Frances. It was two months before the presidential election, and Florida's twenty-seven electoral votes were hanging in the balance. It is hardly surprising that Washington ensured the success of "the largest response to a natural disaster we've ever had in this country." The president himself passed out water bottles to Floridians driven from their homes."
:

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:21 AM on 08/24/2008
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Because we all know there's no crime in Florida. No sir, not a bit.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:27 PM on 08/23/2008
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Here in South Florida, Fay was nothing more than a little wind and some rain. We're very grateful that Fay didn't linger the way she did further north, and I hope that our friends and families in Central and North Florida dry out very soon!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:16 PM on 08/23/2008

Ok Floridians....whats MORE Important come Nov Election....Getting your lives back in some kind of order/along WITH OUR Nation...or voting GOP,to keep them thar gays from gittin' married? It's time to Choose!!! OBAMA/BIDEN 08..."EXPERIENCE & CHANGE"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:43 PM on 08/23/2008
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what an awful thing to post. over a hundred thousand households without power in my city alone. lives have been lost. people are shaken. some things transcend politics. a simple well wish with an obama plug at the end would have sufficed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:59 PM on 08/23/2008
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ditto that, sunshinedaydream - i'm up here in north central florida and just glad we only got windy rains since our region does tend to flood with non stop rains.

everything to these trolls is politics or denial of global warming or "bible" related.

and i've got news for them - as a near-life long floridian, who grew up in south florida, i came from a DEMOCRATIC family, never voted for a republican in my life for any office (nor did any of my family), and am the furtherest thing from a redneck.

i hope things dry out before the next hurricane - september is always the busiest month, unfortunately.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:22 PM on 08/23/2008

It surely is awful to exploit a disaster and reduce it to the status of a backdrop for a h om opromo and campaign advertisement. Here's hoping that you recover from this quickly.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:37 PM on 08/23/2008

Tourist: "Oh, look at the cool big violent tropical storm waves. I think that I'll go for a swim."

Local Jack Ass: "Oh, look at the cool big violent tropical storm wind. I think that I'll go kite flying."

Mr. What-Were-You-Thinking: "Let me crank up my generator here in the closet rather than outside in the open air."

Idiot deaths should be excluded from natural disaster death tolls. (It is not like this storm snuck up on them.) Fools give nature a bad name.

Greta
Native Floridian

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:31 PM on 08/23/2008

er "kite sailing".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:41 PM on 08/23/2008
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i don't know how they do it. we went to the beach at dawn thursday morning to watch the storm come in, but didn't dare even touch the sand, just stood from a walkover. it was the most furious thing i have ever seen in my life. and, to my horror, there were about a half dozen surfers. i couldn't handle it!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:22 PM on 08/23/2008
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I have friends in the Cape Canaveral area. They said it has been raining non-stop and many streets have washed out. My sympathy to all affected by Fay. I hope this is the worst it gets this season.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:17 PM on 08/23/2008
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this afternoon, i find myself extremely grateful to be able to rake the yard and pick up the palm fronds that have littered our lawn for the past few days. it was something i shant soon forget. watching the ocean warn us of the weather to come was amazing. i have a renewed respect for the skies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:32 PM on 08/23/2008

Wow this is like the worse thing to happen when you have drought you get too much rain which can be just as damaging. We need to stop global warming. My thoughts go out to the people of Florida.

Carol

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:47 PM on 08/23/2008
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The concept of severe weather will take on new meanings with Tropical Storm Fay! And global warming and the freaks in denial of global warming just chalk up all changes in the weathr to the Easter Bunny and the Tooth Fairy!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:40 PM on 08/23/2008
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