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Tropical Storm Debby path and tracker: Florida landfall expected Monday morning

A tropical depression strengthened into Tropical Storm Debby on Saturday.

Last Updated: August 4, 2024, 10:34 AM EDT

Tropical Storm Debby is expected to strengthen into a hurricane overnight Sunday before making landfall in Florida's Big Bend region around sunrise Monday morning.

As of Sunday morning, hurricane-force winds of 74-95 mph are forecast in areas under a Hurricane Warning in the Big Bend region. The majority of the Florida Peninsula's west coast is under a Tropical Storm Warning, where winds of 39-73 mph are expected.

The tropical storm entered the Gulf of Mexico off the southwest coast of Florida on Saturday afternoon.

10:34 AM EDT

Flooding forecast as Debby expected to bring up to 20 inches of rain

Florida residents in the Big Bend region of the Panhandle were warned Sunday that Debby is going to bring "catastrophic rain to the area" that will cause flooding and power outages.

Debby is expected to produce high rainfall totals.
ABC News

Kevin Guthrie, director of the Florida Division of Emergency Management, said during a news conference on Sunday that once the Debby makes landfall as a possible Category 1 hurricane on Monday morning, winds will subside quickly, but the slow-moving storm will produce an abundance of rain.

People walk along the beach as Tropical Storm Debby approaches the Gulf Coast, in St. Pete Beach, Fla., August 4, 2024.
Octavio Jones/Reuters

"We're going to be in a catastrophic rain situation where we have situations in Florida that will receive 15, maybe as high as 20 inches of rain," Guthrie said.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis told residents who are in the path of the storm to expect widespread power outages.

"It's possible that you could have serious intensification between now and landfall. It could get up to 85, 90 and 95 mph sustained winds. That is absolutely possible, particularly in parts of the state like here in Tallahassee. There's going to be a lot of trees that are going to fall down and you're going to have debris. You are going to have power interruptions," the governor said.

-ABC News' Bill Hutchinson

10:32 AM EDT

Gov. DeSantis advises residents to make final preparations for Debby

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis advised residents of the state's Panhandle region on Sunday that they should be finalizing preparations for when Tropical Storm Debby makes its anticipated landfall Monday morning as a Category 1 hurricane.

"Now this is a storm that is potentially dangerous. Residents should be finalizing all of their preparations now," DeSantis said during a news conference at the state's Emergency Operation Center in Tallahassee.

Florida Governor Ron Desantis speaks about the approaching tropical storm Debby at a press conference on Aug. 4, 2024.
WTXL

DeSantis said Tropical Storm Debby was in the Gulf of Mexico about 190 miles southwest of Tampa as of Sunday morning with sustained winds of about 50 mph.

"But those are expected to increase," DeSantis said. "Tropical Storm Debby is likely to become a Category 1 hurricane before making landfall in the Big Bend region of Florida."

He said the storm was on a similar track taken by Hurricane Idalia in 2023. Idalia made landfall in Big Bend on Aug. 30, 2023, as a Category 3 hurricane and caused a devastating storm surge of 7 to 12 feet across the coastal Big Bend region in Levy, Dixie and Taylor counties.

"This storm is a similar track," DeSantis said. "It may be a tick to the west of that. It very well may have greater impacts here in the Tallahassee region than Hurricane Idalia did. Once it crosses landfall and enters the Florida Panhandle/Big Bend Region, wherever it does, it's going to move very slowly across northern Florida and southeast Georgia."

-ABC News' Bill Hutchinson

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