'Like Draining Ocean With Straw,' Flood Waters To Remain For Weeks
St. Johns River Up 7 Feet After Fay
Officials said the St. Johns River was not expected to crest until later this week, meaning several inches more of flooding for families living near Lake Harney, Lake Monroe, Lake Kathryn and Lake Jesup."It's like trying to drain the Atlantic Ocean with a straw," DeBary's Bob Karbonic told Local 6's Tiffany Tift Monday. "This will take a good month going around the clock."The city of DeBary has about 100 tanker trucks working overtime to clear water from flooded city streets Monday.Officials with Federal Emergency Management Agency will be in Seminole and Volusia County assessing the damage this week.
More Homes Will Go Under
Meanwhile, search and rescue teams evacuated families from 180 DeBary homes on Sunday in an area that will see more homes go under water even without any additional rain.Officials said neighborhoods in DeBary were the worst hit in Volusia County during Tropical Storm Fay."I'm worried about you all," Mayor George Coleman said. "We've never had water this deep before. The water is still rising. Just because it is not coming from the sky does not mean it is not there. It is coming out of the ground. The St. Johns River is coming up and we are going to have some more problems."Sky 6 showed several neighborhoods completely underwater and vehicles submerged.The city had 30 pumps trying to lower the rising water Sunday and residents near the rising waters were urged to evacuate."If you are in an area we suggested vacate, then vacate," Coleman said. "If you don't, you take that upon yourself to not take our advice and stay. We can't make you leave. We can't give you tickets and we can't put you in jail for not leaving. That is your property and you deserve to try and protect it if that is your choice. But that might be the wrong choice."The Red Cross was handing out cleaning supplies to flood victims Sunday and opened two shelters.The first shelter was opened at St. Ann's Catholic Church and a pet-friendly shelter at the fairgrounds.The storm has been blamed for 13 deaths in the U.S.Brevard Considered Major Disaster Area
President George W. Bush declared Sunday that four Florida counties hit hardest by Tropical Storm Fay are major disaster areas, making them eligible for federal aid. The declaration makes funds available for emergency work and repairs to governments in Brevard, Monroe, Okeechobee and St. Lucie counties. State and federal emergency officials are still assessing the damage from the weeklong storm that caused at least 11 deaths in Florida and one in Georgia. More counties could be added. The funding has not yet been extended to individual homeowners whose properties were damaged by high winds or flood waters. "I'm pleased about the declaration and grateful to President Bush," Florida Gov. Charlie Crist said before touring flood damage at the St. Mark's River in north Florida. Mary Blakeney, spokeswoman for the emergency management office in Okeechobee County, said officials hope to have a decision in coming days about individual home owner assistance. "Those calls have been coming in ... and, at this point, we have some teams coming in that will be doing a more detailed assessment where they will be going into these homes and looking at what type of damage they've had," Blakeney said. Fay was downgraded to a tropical depression on Saturday night after making a record fourth landfall in Florida. Its remnants were forecast to dump several inches of rain across Alabama, Mississippi, eastern Louisiana and Tennessee on Sunday and Monday. Some of those areas have been suffering long-term drought conditions. In Huntsville, Ala., National Weather Service senior forecaster Andy Kula said the 5-day rainfall projection through Friday -- 6 to 7 inches south of the Tennessee River and 3 to 4 inches north of the river -- would spread out and was not expected to create a flood problem. "We need something like this to recharge the soil. It probably won't be a total drought-buster," Kula said Sunday.
- August 23, 2008: Rising Rivers Threaten Homes; Floating Ant Colonies Appear
- August 23, 2008: Fay Makes Record Fourth Landfall; 'Major Disaster' Relief Sought
- August 23, 2008: Fay Prompts Warning To Avoid Ocean
- August 23, 2008: County's Fay Damage Total Hits $58M
- August 23, 2008: Most Central Fla. Schools Open Monday
- August 23, 2008: Fourth Fla. Landfall Possible For Fay
- August 23, 2008: Cresting Rivers Become Concern; Threat Continues Through Weekend
- August 22, 2008: Windows Become Front Doors For Fay Victims; Flood Threat Continues
- August 22, 2008: Divers Swim Over Submerged Cars, Through Neighborhoods To Rescue Homeowners
- August 22, 2008: Major Recovery Aid Sought As Fay Continues To Batter Florida
- August 22, 2008: Aerial View Shows Submerged Cars In Roads, Abandoned Neighborhoods
- August 22, 2008: Raw Sewage-Filled Floodwaters Prompt Fay Health Warnings
- August 22, 2008: Neighbors, TV Reporter Help Motorist Stranded In Flood Waters
- August 22, 2008: Fay Floods Hospital Emergency Room Entrance; Patients Diverted
- August 21, 2008: Fay Floods Parts Of Seminole; Shelters Open
- August 21, 2008: Bush Declares State Of Emergency In Fla.
- August 21, 2008: City's Fay Damage To Top $10 Million; Crist Tours Flooded Florida
- August 21, 2008: Expert: Fay To Bring Mosquito Outbreak
- August 21, 2008: Crist Tours Flooded Homes; Community Under Chest-High Water
- August 21, 2008: Flooding Closes Busy Cental Fla. Ramp
- August 21, 2008: Canoes, Airboats Used To Flee Flooded Neighborhoods
- August 21, 2008: Zig-Zagging Fay Path Includes Fourth Fla. Landfall; More Record-Breaking Rain
- August 21, 2008: Fay Dumps Record-Breaking Rain; Flood Victims Warned Of Alligator Swimming In Streets
- August 21, 2008: Fay Path Shows Storm Moving Across Fla.
- August 20, 2008: Fay Becoming 'Catastrophic' Flood Event; 30 Inches Of Rain Expected
- August 20, 2008: Curfew Issued For Flooded Satellite Beach
- August 20, 2008: Fay No Longer Predicted To Strengthen Before Third Fla. Landfall
- August 20, 2008: Looters Prey On Fay Victims, Police Say
- August 20, 2008: Tolls Reinstated On Central Fla. Roads
- August 19, 2008: Fay-Spawned Tornado Injures 2 People, Damages 54 Homes
- August 19, 2008: Alligator Spotted Walking Street Near Fay-Spawned Tornado Touchdown
- August 19, 2008: Fay Surprises, Intensifies Over Florida
- August 19, 2008: Storm Closes Central Fla. Schools
- August 19, 2008: Fay Could Dump Rain For Days; Chance Of Strengthening Exists
- August 19, 2008: T.S. Fay Slows Down On Path Through Florida; Dumps Heavy Rain
- August 19, 2008: Fay Does Not Intensify Before Landfall; Storm Moving East
- August 19, 2008: Central Fla. Shelters Open For T.S. Fay
- August 19, 2008: Kite Surfer Dragged Through Streets, Into Building By T.S. Fay Waterspout
- August 19, 2008: Sandbags Offered In Orlando, Daytona
- August 19, 2008: 'Alarming' Price-Gouging Complaints Before Fay Include Flashlight Batteries
- August 18, 2008: Path Shows Fay No Longer Cat. 1 Storm At Landfall; Aims For Orlando
- August 18, 2008: Path Shows T.S. Fay Passing Through Orlando; Landfall As Cat. 1
- August 18, 2008: Path Pushes Fay Over Orlando
- August 18, 2008: Current Trends Move Fay Path East
- August 18, 2008: T.S. Fay's New Path Jogs East; Aims For Landfall Near Tampa As Cat. 1
- August 16, 2008: Path Puts Tropical Storm-Force Winds In Orange County Next Week
- August 16, 2008: Path Moves Fay Through Central Fla. As Weak Hurricane Or Tropical Storm
- August 16, 2008: Crist Declares State Of Emergency
- August 16, 2008: New Path Puts Category 1 Hurricane On Top Of Florida Early Next Week
- August 15, 2008: Tropical Storm Fay Targets Florida







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