JACKSONVILLE, Fla.(AP)
Tropical Storm Fay meandered north along the Florida Atlantic
coast Wednesday but did not immediately head out over the ocean,
lessening the chances it will gain strength and become a
hurricane.
Northern Florida and much of Georgia are expecting a long
drenching, which some farmers hope will boost crops hurt by a
lingering drought.
In Jacksonville early Wednesday, business was brisk at grocery
stores and gas stations as people prepared for Fay's arrival.
Velton Jones, manager at a discount department store, said he was
selling basics such as water, flashlights, emergency supplies and
cigarettes.
"The storm's coming, people want to have their
cigarettes," Jones said. "I expect it's going to be
chaotic in here today."
Customer Rodney Van Buren bought diapers, ice and other
things.
"We're not scared, just being cautious," he said.
"We don't want to wait until the last minute."
There were no new reports of damage Wednesday and only minor
street flooding in the Melbourne area, where Fay was predicted to
dump between 5 and 10 inches of rain.
Cocoa resident Meghan Ellison, 22, said her 5-year-old daughter
Brianna was disappointed she couldn't start her first day of
kindergarten because schools were closed.
"I woke up and was surprised the storm wasn't as bad as
I thought it would be," she said.
The storm hit the Florida Keys on Monday, veered over the Gulf
and then traversed east across the state Tuesday on a path that
would have taken it over the Atlantic before it curved toward the
Florida-Georgia border.
Forecasters had originally expected the storm to get a dose of
energy when it moved over the ocean and possibly become a
hurricane. But the storm's center remained just inland early
Wednesday and forecasters said it may not go over the water until
the afternoon. The chances of Fay becoming a hurricane were
shrinking, the National Hurricane Center said.
Still, a hurricane watch remained in effect for parts of north
Florida and Georgia. A tropical storm warning was extended,
covering an area from north of Jupiter Inlet to Altamaha Sound in
Georgia. A warning means such conditions are expected within 24
hours, while a watch means such conditions are possible within 36
hours.
The storm was near Cape Canaveral at 8 a.m. EDT Wednesday, about
15 miles south of Cape Canaveral. Its maximum sustained winds had
dropped to 45 mph from near 50 mph and it was moving north at about
5 mph.
And while forecasters warned rainfall from the storm could just
as easily be catastrophic as benign, farmers in drought-plagued
areas were cautiously optimistic.
"It's very seldom we're hoping for a hurricane, but
we are," said Randy Branch, a farmer in southeast Georgia
where lingering drought has left about a third of his cotton and
peanut crops bare this summer.
"We need some rain pretty bad."
National Weather Service meteorologist Steve Letro said it's
possible southern Georgia could receive 10 to 20 inches of rain _
enough to cause severe flooding _ if it makes a second
landfall.
"I know people hate drought, but when you're talking
about a tropical cyclone relieving drought conditions, be careful
what you wish for," said Letro, the chief meteorologist in
Jacksonville, Fla.
In Duval County, which surrounds Jacksonville, officials
prepared shelters, cleared drainage areas that could flood and
readied emergency response teams. Public schools canceled Wednesday
and Thursday classes, and mobile home residents were encouraged to
find sturdier shelter.
"Our biggest concern is complacency. Jacksonville has a
history of being shielded from storm systems. While we don't
want anyone to panic, we want everyone in the area to take this
storm seriously," said Misty Skipper, a county
spokeswoman.
In southeast Georgia, Camden County public works crews cleaned
storm drains and ditches in preparation for possible flooding. The
Georgia Emergency Management Agency also began 24-hour operations
Tuesday afternoon to monitor the storm.
A National Hurricane Center forecast late Tuesday projected that
the storm's path would take it through Alabama over the
weekend. However, projections varied widely, prompting some in
South Carolina to hope for crop-sating rain.
"I just came in from the fields. Everything is burning
up," said Belton, S.C., farmer Charles Campbell. "If a
storm is brewing down there, just send it up I-26."
Fay formed over the weekend in the Atlantic and was blamed for
20 deaths in the Caribbean before hitting Florida's southwest
coast, where it fell short of predictions it could be a Category 1
hurricane when it came ashore.
The storm flooded streets in Naples, downed trees and cut power
to some 95,000 homes and businesses in South Florida. The worst of
the storm's wrath appeared to be 51 homes hit by a tornado in
Brevard County, southeast of Orlando, including nine homes that
were totaled.
Two injuries were reported in the Brevard County tornado, and a
kitesurfer who was caught in a gust of wind Monday was critically
injured when he slammed into a building in front of the beach near
Fort Lauderdale. Kevin Kearney, 28, was still in critical condition
Tuesday, Broward General Medical Center officials and his family
said.
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Associated Press Writers Curt Anderson and Lisa Orkin Emmanuel
reported from Miami; Christine Armario reported in Tampa, Tamara
Lush reported in Punta Gorda, Bill Kaczor and Brendan Farrington
reported from Tallahassee and Sarah Larimer from Orlando.
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