Fay Bedevils Florida For 5th Weary Day
Tropical Storm Plods Across State With Drenching Rains; 2 Drown In Heavy Surf
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National Guard troops help Mike White, left, evacuate his home in the Lamplighter Village neighborhood after rains from Tropical Storm Fay flooded the area in Melbourne, Fla., Aug. 21, 2008. (AP Photo/John Raoux)
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Veronica Frattin and her daughter, Scarlett, walk in a flooded Merritt Island, Fla. neighborhood Aug. 21, 2008 after Tropical Storm Fay dumped several inches of rain on the area. (AP Photo/J. Pat Carter)
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Flood waters surround a "no swimming" sign in Melbourne, Fla. Friday, Aug. 22, 2008. Residents of the area are still waiting to return home. (AP Photo/J. Pat Carter)
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Parts of Lamplighter Village in Melbourne, Fla. remain under flood waters Friday, Aug. 22, 2008 after Tropical Storm Fay moved away from the coastal area. (AP Photo/J. Pat Carter)
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This image provided by NOAA shows Tropical Storm Fay taken Friday Aug. 22, 2008 at 6:32 a.m. EDT. (AP Photo/NOAA)
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Play CBS Video Video Fay Drenches Florida Residents in many parts of Florida can't leave their homes due to flash flooding as Tropical Storm Fay hugs the east coast. Gov. Charlie Crist is calling it a catastrophic event. Dave Price reports.
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Video Fay's Unwelcome Stay Tropical Storm Fay is hovering over Florida's east coast and is likely to stay through the weekend. In some areas, waters are waist-deep and hundreds of homes are flooded. Dave Price reports.
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Video Fay Stays, May Hit Fla. Again Tropical storm Fay lingers in Florida and may return for a third time. Residents are dealing with flooding as well as damage from tornadoes formed in the storm's wake. Dave Price reports.
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Photo Essay Fay Extends Stay Torrential rain from slow-moving tropical storm triggers more flooding in Florida.
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The erratic storm has dumped more than two feet of rain along parts of Florida's low-lying central Atlantic coast.
It is just the fourth storm to make landfall in Florida with such strength three separate times, and the first in nearly 50 years. Before it eases across the Panhandle by the weekend, it could bring buckets rain.
Two people drowned in heavy surf Thursday as the storm came ashore in Flagler Beach, nudging Fay's total death toll to 25 after Haiti discovered three more bodies. The drownings were the first United States deaths directly caused by the storm.
In Melbourne, evacuations continued as water levels reached five feet in some neighborhoods, reports CBS' The Early Show weather anchor Dave Price.
"We've got water up almost to the mailboxes," one resident said.
A swamp buggy typically used by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission to navigate the deep waters of swampland has been recommissioned to try and navigate the waters of the community, Price reports. Streets that were once used to get to the store have become staging grounds for the National Guard.
President Bush issued a federal disaster declaration Thursday for the affected parts of Florida, as hundreds of residents fled floodwaters that drove alligators and snakes out of their habitats and into streets.
Susan and Gary Redwine of Merritt Island, near Cape Canaveral, got sick of sitting inside for three days and decided to hop onto their kayaks for a cruise through the neighborhood.
"It's the only dry way to get around. It's not like you can go jogging or anything," said 49-year-old Gary Redwine.
Emergency officials planned to begin surveying damage along the coast Friday as the floodwaters were expected to slowly recede.
The storm first made landfall in the Florida Keys earlier this week, then headed out over open water again before hitting a second time near Naples. It then advanced slowly across the state, popped back out into the Atlantic Ocean and struck again.
Flooding was especially acute along Florida's Atlantic coast from Port St. Lucie to Cape Canaveral, with water reaching depths of 5 feet and more in some neighborhoods.
"This is the worst I've absolutely ever seen it," said Mike White, 57, after he was rescued by the National Guard from floodwaters lapping at the doorstep of his mobile home.
At 5 a.m. EDT Friday, the storm's center was located about 65 miles east-northeast of Cedar Key and moving west near 6 mph, according to the National Hurricane Center. Its maximum sustained winds were near 50 mph and it was forecast to gradually weaken.
Isolated tornadoes were possible in parts of northeastern Florida, southeastern Georgia and southern South Carolina, the hurricane center said.
In Neptune Beach on Thursday, police said an Indiana tourist drowned after going swimming in a rough ocean churned up by the storm. To the south in Volusia County, authorities said Fatmira Krkuti, 35, of Brooklyn, N.Y., also drowned in Fay-generated waves.
In some flooded areas, residents were warned to keep watch for alligators, snakes and other wildlife forced from their habitats and swimming in search of dry land. At least two alligators were captured in residential neighborhoods and several others spotted.
"This storm has been hanging around and hanging around and hanging around," said Florida Gov. Charlie Crist, who visited the region Thursday. "And she's going to be around for a while longer.
"We'll get through this," Crist added. "This too shall pass."
Brevard County officials gave a preliminary damage estimate of $12 million in Melbourne, mostly from flooding, and $2.6 million from beach erosion.
The outer bands of Fay continued to pour sporadic rains Thursday along the 100-mile Georgia coast, with some areas reporting winds of 20 to 30 mph. The National Weather Service said southern Georgia could see some flooding from 5 to 10 inches of rain as the storm moved west through northern Florida.
A tropical storm watch was posted for the Gulf coast of Florida from the Suwannee River to Indian Pass, in case the storm emerges over water again.
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- There''s essentially been a black out on the major networks of news about Fay from Jacksonville, FL.
According to local CBS affiliate, this afternoon over 100 nursing home residents were transferred to other facilities because of up to 2 feet of water inside their facility.
The wind, rain, and flooding associated with Fay have been worse than some level 1 hurricanes because "she" has stalled and/or moved so slowly for the past week. - Reply to this comment
- There''s essentially been a black out on the major networks of news about Fay from Jacksonville, FL.
This afternoon over 100 nursing home residents were transferred to other facilities because of 2 feet of water inside facility.
The wind, rain, and flooding associated with Fay have been worse than some level 1 hurricanes because it has stalled and/or moved so slowly for the past week. - Reply to this comment
- Observer2020: Anytime. Glad you got a chuckle out of it. We all need those on Fridays.
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- MyOpinion381: ROFL! Thanks for the advice (and the laugh)....and...Done.
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- Anyone know how Orange Park is faring...it''s SW of Jacksonville. Got a good friend down there who said they were getting clocked last night with heavy rain and E winds off the ocean.
I left FL almost 35 years ago and I still miss itthe sand, surf, and sunshine.. I''ll take hurricanes and snakes and gators over endless winter grayness and lake effect snow squalls off Lake Erie any time.
Only thing I don''t miss are the BUGS. Fire ants, roaches, centipedes, scorpions, and especially the termites. My wife and I have literally millions of good reasons not to retire to FL.
Grizzster - Reply to this comment
- Posted by observer2020 at 10:18 AM: gop: I''''m praying really hard for you to get a grip.
I wouldn''t waste your time. He''s too far gone. - Reply to this comment
- Let it rain, let it rain, let it rain. Hope that woman with the little one walking through the water doesn''t come across one of those gaters.
gop: I''m praying really hard for you to get a grip. - Reply to this comment
- oh, vomit.
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- It has been determined that Fay is a democrat, what with being politically correct and equal opportunity, why hit just one part of the state when you can just go all out and wipe out the whole thing. As for the people of Florida, my sympathy, but ya got snakes and alligators swimming in your yard...move to higher ground. Sorry but I never much liked Florida.
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