-
Crews continue to clean up after Debby more than 2 weeks after it made landfall in Florida. Debby left a trail of debris, floods and more.
-
The analysis, which looked at the effects of the storm in Florida and other states, said insured losses for the private insurance market and the National Flood Insurance Program likely will total $1 billion to $2 billion.
-
As Floridians, especially across North Florida, clean up after Hurricane Debby dragged through the area, heat returns and there are still chances for a hyperactive hurricane season. Colorado State University released an update to their forecast and it calls for up to 23 named storms.
-
Debby is almost completely gone from Florida. There are still a few areas that will deal with rainbands, now we go onto transitional weather conditions.
-
Cheri and Rusty Jakes who live in Steinhatchee, a tiny fishing town on Florida's Big Bend, are surveying their flooded carport after Hurricane Debby hit.
-
Tropical Storm Debby has moved menacingly into some of America's most historic Southern cities in what is expected to be a prolonged event of torrential downpours and flooding after slamming into Florida with heavy rain and high winds.
-
Debby made landfall as a hurricane in the Big Bend area of Florida's Gulf Coast. Forecasters warned heavy rain could spawn catastrophic flooding in Florida, South Carolina and Georgia.
-
UPDATED: The storm made landfall Monday morning near Steinhatchee, a community of less than 1,000 residents in the Big Bend area of Florida's Gulf Coast, as Category 1 storm with maximum sustained winds of 80 mph.
-
Debby will move slowly and it is large. Rainbands will continue to affect Florida through the middle of the week, with periods of drier air.