Medicine Hat News

Tropical storm Emily: Power outages, rain, fishermen rescued

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ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. Tropical Storm Emily weakened to a tropical depression Monday afternoon as it slogged eastward across the Florida peninsula, spreading drenching rains, causing power outages and leaving two fishermen to be rescued from Tampa Bay.

The National Hurricane Center said Emily made landfall late Monday on Florida’s Gulf Coast south of Tampa Bay and then began moving east toward the Atlantic coast. Emily spent only a few hours as a tropical storm, losing strength as it marched inland across the central Florida peninsula toward the Atlantic coast.

Florida Gov. Rick Scott said at an afternoon news briefing in the state capital of Tallahasse­e that about 18,000 homes and businesses lost power, mostly in hard-hit Manatee County. Scott, who was on vacation in Maine and returned to the state when the advisory changed, said the storm was a reminder that severe weather can strike the state at any time.

State emergency management officials also said that the Sunshine Skyway Bridge over Tampa Bay, which was closed for a few hours because of high winds, had since reopened. The storm had maximum sustained winds of 45 mph as it crawled ashore but was down to top winds of 35 mph hours later.

No injuries have been reported along the Gulf Coast, although two fishermen were rescued from Tampa Bay while clinging to a channel marker light after their boat sank.

Coast Guard officials said they were called Monday morning about the two brothers, who had been out fishing when their boat engine died. While the brothers worked on the inoperable pump, the boat drifted and struck the range light, according to a Coast Guard statement. The brothers tied their boat off to the light and were forced to cling to the navigation aid and call for help when the vessel sank. A boat from Coast Guard station St. Petersburg rescued the men.

At 5 p.m. Monday, Emily was moving inland over west-central Florida about 45 kilometres northwest of Sebring in south-central Florida. Forecaster­s said Emily was expected to dump between 2 to 4 inches (50 to 100 millimeter­s) of rain in some areas, with isolated amounts up to 8 inches (200 millimeter­s) possible in spots. Lesser amounts were predicted elsewhere.

On Treasure Island, a barrier island in the Gulf of Mexico west of St. Petersburg, a normally packed beach parking lot was almost empty of tourists Monday. Only a handful of people were on the white sand beach and a few bodysurfed small waves in an area that doesn’t normally get waves. Some took selfies amid a mix of clouds and patches of blue sky on the northern fringe of the storm system.

Kevin Baker, a 53-year-old retiree who takes his walks daily at Treasure Island, said he decided to venture out despite the storm “to watch the clouds to go by.”

“This morning was pretty bad. It rained pretty hard. I got a little leak in my Jeep even,” said Baker. But though the weather there had briefly improved at midday, he added, “we’re supposed to get hit again.”

A flood watch is in effect for much of the Tampa area, raising the threat of some scattered street flooding in low-lying areas. Law enforcemen­t agencies urged motorists to drive with caution on a day that began as a miserable Monday morning commute for many. A few Tampa area communitie­s, such as Pinellas Park and Tarpon Springs, offered residents sandbags to stave off any flooding.

 ?? SKIP O’ROURKE/TAMPA BAY TIMES VIA AP ?? Part of a tree rests on a mobile home in the Easy Living Mobile Home Park after strong winds moved through the area in Tampa, Fla., Monday, July 31, 2017.
SKIP O’ROURKE/TAMPA BAY TIMES VIA AP Part of a tree rests on a mobile home in the Easy Living Mobile Home Park after strong winds moved through the area in Tampa, Fla., Monday, July 31, 2017.

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