Helicopters, boats rescue people in Pennsylvania
Helicopters and boats were deployed in Tioga County in northern Pennsylvania on Friday to help rescue people trapped in floodwaters, according to the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency.
Debby will exit the Northeast on Saturday.
Debby, which weakened from a tropical storm to a tropical depression Thursday afternoon, is slamming the Mid-Atlantic and the Northeast with heavy rain on Friday.
Debby made landfall in Florida as a Category 1 hurricane on Monday and crawled up the East Coast all week.
Debby, now a post-tropical cyclone, is slamming the Northeast with heavy rain.
A life-threatening flash flood emergency was issued in northern Pennsylvania and southern New York due to fast-moving floodwaters.
A flood watch remains in effect for parts of nine states from South Carolina to New Hampshire due to the intense rain.
Showers with some downpours will continue across the Northeast through the evening. Tornadoes are also possible.
Debby will be gone by Saturday morning.
Helicopters and boats were deployed in Tioga County in northern Pennsylvania on Friday to help rescue people trapped in floodwaters, according to the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency.
Four states recorded more than 1 foot of rain this week from Tropical Storm Debby.
Parrish, Florida, and Summerville, South Carolina, saw more than 18 inches of rain.
Kings Grant, North Carolina, recorded over 15 inches, while Oliver, Georgia, saw more than 14 inches.
At least eight people have died from Tropical Storm Debby.
The most recent fatality was Thursday night, as a 78-year-old woman was killed when a tree fell on her mobile home in Browns Summit, North Carolina, according the Rockingham County Sheriff's Office.
A flash food warning is in effect in Washington, D.C., and the surrounding areas until 11 a.m.
The rainfall rate could reach a dangerous 2.5 to 4.5 inches per hour.