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Maps and photos show massive rainfall in Florida as flooded communities face ongoing downpours
A relentless string of powerful storms soaked parts of southern Florida this week and today’s forecasts predict massive amounts of rain will pummel vast sections of the state through Friday.
As images emerged of children traversing South Florida streets in an inflatable raft, adults wading through knee-deep water covering neighborhood blocks, and cars stalled while submerged and stranded in the middle of roadways, meteorologists warned on Thursday that as much as 8 more inches of rain could accumulate in low-lying areas before the weekend. Officials said around 20 inches had fallen on Thursday afternoon in Hallandale Beach, near Fort Lauderdale. Videos from the southernmost Broward County city showed cars submerged to the hood.
Seven million people in South Florida were under flood watches or warnings on Thursday, with forecasters projecting the most severe weather for counties previously hit by earlier deluges in the last few days.
What communities in Florida will be impacted?
A tropical disturbance triggered a rare flash flood emergency warning across the tip of the Florida peninsula Thursday. Parts of South Florida, some of which were hit hardest by heavy rains and flooding earlier in the week, were bracing for another 4 to 8 inches of rainfall through Friday, said NEXT Weather meteorologist Lissette Gonzalez on CBS News Miami.
Meteorologists at the Weather Prediction Center had updated their risk profile for excessive rainfall in Florida’s southernmost areas to “high” early in the morning, explaining in a bulletin that the upgrade accounted “for significant impacts expected with the next round of heavy rainfall over extremely sensitive areas that include the urban corridor in Southeast FL through the I-75 corridor over Alligator Alley.”
Named after the reptiles that also inhabit the land, Alligator Alley runs horizontally across the Florida peninsula from around Fort Lauderdale on the West Coast to Naples on the East Coast. Florida wildlife officials have said that alligators and other wildlife could become more visible in flooded neighborhoods after a hurricane or tropical storm. It was not immediately clear whether current flooding would bring them out in the same way.
Gov. Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency for multiple southern counties on Wednesday, while Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava, Miami Mayor Francis Suarez and Fort Lauderdale Mayor Dean Trantalis individually issued emergency declarations for their jurisdictions in response to torrential rain and flooding, which caused cars to stall and grounded flights at two major airports.
Those declarations trigger a set of emergency management protocols that allow authorities, either at the local or state level, or both, to access funds and other resources to respond to the weather. With the declaration in Miami, the city also set up distribution sites for sandbags, for residents to place outside the doors and windows of their homes to block out water, and opened nine public parking garages for people in flood-prone areas to leave their cars.
Another state of emergency was declared for the cities of Dania Beach and Sunny Isles Beach, as police and fire crews said they had conducted at least 40 rescues in Dania Beach in the midst of Wednesday’s storms, CBS News Miami reported. Photos and video out of Dania Beach showed streets completely flooded, with water levels in some instances as high as a car tire.
Many of those cities and counties braced for ongoing storms throughout Thursday, and a flood warning was active for Miami-Dade and Broward Counties until 4 a.m. ET on Friday morning.
How much rain is Florida forecast to get?
Storms have already dumped massive amounts of rain on much of southern Florida, with the latest precipitation reports suggesting as much as 20 inches fell in parts of Miami-Dade and Broward Counties. These totals were just shy of the record rainfall total recorded in the state over the last three days, which surpassed two feet of rain in the Everglades. Along the Gulf Coast, reports show at least 6 or 7 inches fell in several counties this week, and as much as 10 or 11 inches fell in several of them.
Wednesday’s rainfall set new records in a handful of places, including some as far north as Fort Myers and the Winter Haven Regional Airport, the latter of which is about halfway between Tampa Bay and Orlando, according to the weather service. In Fort Myers, the city’s latest rainfall of 3.86 inches surpassed its 2008 record-high of 2.14 inches. Precipitation records for Fort Myers date back more than a century.
New rainfall totals in and around Fort Myers could potentially surpass that record, as forecasters said 2 to 4 inches of rain had already fallen in the area early Thursday afternoon, and between 1 and 2 more inches was still expected.
Another heap of precipitation, potentially as much as 6 to 10 inches, could fall on parts of southwestern Florida throughout the rest of the week, they added, and the Weather Prediction Center noted that even higher amounts could potentially accumulate in isolated areas along the coast and extend inland to the interior part of the peninsula. The southwestern flood watch was set to expire at 8 p.m. ET on Thursday evening.
A flood watch was in place for communities along nearly a 100-mile stretch of Florida’s Gulf Coast, running from Tampa Bay through Fort Myers and extending inland for roughly the same distance at certain points in the watch area east of Sarasota. Meteorologists said that parts of coastal Sarasota County, which sits just below Tampa Bay, felt the brunt of the Gulf Coast weather on Wednesday, with 6 to 10 inches of rain recorded in various spots. One rainfall report showed almost 11.4 inches at a location in Sarasota.
Despite the significant rainfall that already hit western Florida and the additional totals expected, forecasters said widespread flooding probably would not materialize, since precipitation would be coming in spurts and the breaks in between allowing water to drain. The primary concern was localized flooding and, potentially, flooding in urban areas. “Heavy rainfall is forecast now through the weekend. At times, this could lead to mainly minor nuisance flooding in low-lying and poor drainage areas,” NWS Tampa Bay said Tuesday in a social media post.
The agency advised drivers in the area to avoid flooded roads — according to National Weather Service data, almost half of all flood-related deaths in the United States each year involve vehicles.
Although the Florida counties farthest south on the peninsula were expected to see the most damaging rainfall Thursday and Friday, meteorologists also warned that the proximity of certain places nearer the Gulf Coast could still face substantial threats of more heavy rain and flooding, especially in areas where the ground is already saturated from earlier storms. They said their biggest concerns for southwestern Florida could come to fruition at some point Thursday afternoon when higher overall temperatures would likely destabilize the weather systems overhead and prompt a batter of showers and thunderstorms.
CBS News
China school knife attack kills at least 8, wounds 17, days after fatal car attack killed dozens
Eight people were killed and 17 others wounded Saturday in a knife attack at a vocational school in eastern China, and the suspect — a former student — has been arrested, police said.
The attack took place in the evening at the Wuxi Vocational Institute of Arts and Technology in the city of Yixing in Jiangsu province, police in Yixing said in a statement, confirming the toll.
This was the second incident of fatal violence in China in a matter of days.
Earlier this week, a 62-year-old man killed 35 people and wounded more than 40 more when he rammed his small SUV into a crowd in the southern city of Zhuhai. The suspect was discovered in the car with a knife, with wounds to his neck thought to be self-harm injuries, according to the police.
Police said the suspect in the knife attack was a 21-year-old former student at the school who was meant to graduate this year, but failed his exams.
“He returned to the school to express his anger and commit these murders,” police said, adding that the suspect had confessed.
In Yixing, police said emergency services were fully mobilized to treat the wounded, and provide follow-up care for those affected by the attack.
Violent knife crime is not uncommon in China, where firearms are strictly controlled, but attacks with such a high death toll are relatively rare.
In recent months, there has been a spate of other attacks.
In October in Shanghai, a man killed three people and wounded 15 others in a knife attack at a supermarket.
And the month before, a Japanese schoolboy was fatally stabbed in the southern city of Shenzhen, which borders Hong Kong.
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Oklahoma attorney general says state schools superintendent cannot mandate students watch prayer video
The Oklahoma attorney general’s office responded after the state’s education superintendent sent an email this week to public school administrators requiring them to show students his video announcement of a new Department of Religious Freedom and Patriotism. In the video, he prays for President-elect Trump.
Ryan Walters, a Republican, announced the new office on Wednesday and on Thursday sent the email to school superintendents statewide. The new department will be within the state’s Department of Education. Walters said it would “oversee the investigation of abuses to individual religious freedom or displays of patriotism.”
“In one of the first steps of the newly created department, we are requiring all of Oklahoma schools to play the attached video to all kids that are enrolled,” according to the email. Districts were also told to send the video to all parents of students.
In the video, Walters says religious liberty has been attacked and patriotism mocked “by woke teachers unions,” then prays for the leaders of the United States after saying students do not have to join in the prayer.
“In particular, I pray for President Donald Trump and his team as they continue to bring about change to the country,” Walters said.
The office of state Attorney General Gentner Drummond issued a statement Friday saying Walters has no authority under state law to issue such a mandate.
“Not only is this edict unenforceable, it is contrary to parents’ rights, local control and individual free-exercise rights,” said the attorney general’s office spokesperson Phil Bacharach.
Multiple school districts have also said they had no plans to show students the video.
Walters, a former public school teacher elected in 2022, ran on a platform of fighting “woke ideology,” banning books from school libraries and getting rid of “radical leftists” who he claims are indoctrinating children in classrooms. He already faces two lawsuits over his June mandate that schools incorporate the Bible into lesson plans for students in grades 5 through 12. Several school districts have previously stated that they will disregard the mandate.
One of the lawsuits also notes that the initial request for proposal released by the State Department of Education to purchase the Bibles appears to have been tailored to match Bibles endorsed by now President-elect Donald Trump that sell for $59.99 each.
Earlier this week, Walters announced he had purchased more than 500 Bibles to be used in Advanced Placement government classes. The education department that the 500 Bibles are “God Bless the USA Bibles” and were ordered Thursday for about $25,000. They will arrive “in the coming weeks,” the department said.