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Tropical Storm Debby stalls off Carolinas, bringing relentless rain to region

Hurricane Debby brought unrelenting rain to the U.S. Southeast as it drifted off the Carolinas on Wednesday morning, threatening the area with hazardous flooding before picking up speed in the coming days and racing toward the Northeast.

At least 6 people have passed away in Florida and Georgia in the wake of the storm, which barged into Florida's Gulf Coast on Monday as a Classification 1 storm and raced north. It is anticipated to threat the southeastern and mid-Atlantic coasts for days.

Governors in the Carolinas, Florida and Georgia have stated a state of emergency. The storm has currently left neighborhoods and neighborhoods under water with extensive flooding washing out streets and swamping homes throughout the area.

This is certainly a severe rains event ... so because respect the flooding has actually been something that we haven't seen in many years, stated Neil Dixon, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Charleston, South Carolina, noting that daily rainfall records have been broken in the location.

The storm could deliver another 3 to 9 inches of rainfall to the Carolina coast, the National Weather condition Service stated. That would bring rain overalls to 25 inches in South Carolina and 15 inches in southeast North Carolina near Wilmington and seaside Georgia.

The system was packing sustained winds as high as 45 miles per hour (75 kilometers per hour) early Wednesday morning, the service stated, cautioning coastal locals from the South Santee River in South Carolina to Cape Fear, North Carolina, to be prepared for an unsafe storm surge. But Debby's biggest risk was the large volume of rain it might discard on the Eastern Coast and the potential for flooding that would follow into next week.

Rivers will not crest for another couple of days, Dixon stated. We're still a number of days away from quite notable river flooding.

The storm, which was sneaking at 5 miles per hour on Wednesday early morning, ought to pick up speed on Thursday, bringing 3 to 7 inches of rain to eastern Virginia through Friday. A heavy soaking is anticipated in the north from Maryland to upstate New York by the weekend.

(source: Reuters)