Debby triggers flash floods in Pennsylvania, New York
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[August 10, 2024]
By Rich McKay and Brad Brooks
(Reuters) -The remnants of storm Debby triggered flash flooding in
northern Pennsylvania and southern New York state that left dozens of
people stranded in their homes on Friday, authorities said.
Several people were rescued by boat and by helicopters across the region
as Debby sped through the area, dumping several inches of rain on land
that was already soaked from earlier this week.
"We've carried out upward of 30 rescues so far and we're continuing to
search house to house," said Bill Goltz, the fire chief in Westfield,
Pennsylvania, which has a population of 1,100. "We're evacuating the
town. So far, we've had no deaths or injuries. But nearby towns have
missing people."
The National Weather Service issued tornado warnings for the area.
Debby, downgraded from a tropical storm to a depression on Thursday,
spawned deadly twisters earlier in the week and was expected to continue
doing so before it blows out to sea Saturday afternoon.
The governors of Pennsylvania and New York issued disaster and emergency
declarations to free up resources to assist the areas of northern
Pennsylvania and southern New York where flash floods left people
stranded and in need of rescue.
The NWS issued flood warnings and tornado watches for parts of an area
stretching from coastal Georgia to Vermont, as the storm moved northeast
at 35 miles (56 km) an hour, considerably faster than earlier in the
week.
Debby, a slow-moving storm for most of the week, has dropped as much as
25 inches (63 cm) of rain on its march north and killed at least eight
people.
Since making its first landfall as a Category 1 hurricane on Florida's
Gulf Coast on Monday, Debby has submerged homes and roadways, and forced
evacuations and water rescues as it slowly crawled up the Eastern
Seaboard.
The weather service fielded reports of a handful of tornadoes since
Thursday. In Browns Summit, North Carolina, about 80 miles (130 km)
northwest of Raleigh, a 78-year-old woman was killed when a tree fell on
her mobile home, NBC affiliate WXII reported, citing law enforcement.
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A floodwater is seen on a road as Tropical Storm Debby moves across
South Carolina, in Marion, South Carolina, U.S., August 8, 2024.
REUTERS/Marco Bello/File Photo
Earlier, a twister killed a man when his house collapsed in Wilson
County in eastern North Carolina. It damaged at least 10 houses, a
church and a school.
North and South Carolina have been hit hardest by Debby's prodigious
rainfall.
In the South Carolina town of Moncks Corner, swift-water rescue
teams were mobilized on Friday as dangerous flash flooding forced
evacuations and the closure of an interstate highway.
Earlier in the week, a tornado buzzed through Moncks Corner, about
50 miles (80 km) north of Charleston, flipping cars and wrecking a
fast-food restaurant.
In Barre, Vermont, about 7 miles (11 km) southeast of the capital
Montpelier, Rick Dente spent his morning securing plastic tarps over
the roof and surrounding the doors with sandbags at his family-owned
store, Dente's Market.
Vermont, which is under a state of federal emergency, has already
faced a slew of rainstorms from a separate system that has washed
out roads, damaged homes and swollen rivers and creeks with
floodwaters.
The remnants of Debby could bring another 3 inches (7.6 cm)or more
rain, the weather service said.
"We're worried," said Dente, thinking about the store that has been
in the family since 1907, and he has run since 1972. Once a grocery
store, it now caters mostly to tourists seeking antiques and
keepsakes.
"Everytime it rains, it's worse," he said. "I worry every time it
rains."
(Reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta, Brad Brooks in Colorado and
Brendan O'Brien in Chicago; Editing by Nick Zieminski and Jonathan
Oatis and Miral Fahmy)
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