Colin pours down on northern Florida

Up to 8 inches of rain expected as tropical storm moves overland to Atlantic

Attendants move chairs from the rising tide behind the El Governor Motel in Mexico Beach, Fla., on Monday.
Attendants move chairs from the rising tide behind the El Governor Motel in Mexico Beach, Fla., on Monday.

TAMPA, Fla. -- Heavy rain from Tropical Storm Colin hit north Florida and southern Georgia on Monday, knocking out power in some areas and flooding roads on the Gulf coast.

Residents filled sandbags, schools closed early and graduation ceremonies were postponed as Gov. Rick Scott declared a state of emergency.

The National Hurricane Center said Colin marked the earliest that a third named storm has ever formed in the Atlantic basin.

Colin's maximum sustained winds Monday were near 50 mph with some strengthening possible during the next two days. While rains pelted the region, the storm was centered about 190 miles west-northwest of Tampa and was moving north-northeast at 23 mph.

Early Monday, Ronald P. Milligan, 74, stopped by a park in St. Petersburg where authorities planned to distribute sandbags because the ditch in front of his home had filled during the previous evening's rain.

"If last night was a 'no storm' and the water was almost up to the hump in my yard, I'm worried," Milligan said, motioning to about knee level. He's lived in Florida since the late 1970s and has never prepared for a storm this early.

Sandbags also were distributed in Tampa and cities and counties throughout the region.

The forecast for Colin called for the center of the storm to make landfall near the Big Bend area of Florida sometime Monday evening, and move across the Florida peninsula into Georgia and then move along or just off the South Carolina coast before heading out to sea.

Schools in at least one Florida Gulf Coast county were dismissed early Monday, and two high school graduations in the Tampa Bay area were postponed due to the storms, with the ceremonies rescheduled for Wednesday night and Thursday. Winds from Colin also closed the Sunshine Skyway Bridge in Tampa.

Farther north, at Cedar Keys National Wildlife Refuge, roads were flooded and businesses sent people home early, said Andrew Gude, manager of the refuge for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

"We're taking chain saws home so we can cut our way out of our neighborhoods and cut our way back into work tomorrow," Gude said.

About 7,600 people were without power in the Tampa Bay area. Duke Energy said Monday afternoon it had 3,600 customers without electricity, while Tampa Electric Co. said on its website that 4,022 people were experiencing outages. In Jacksonville, on Florida's Atlantic coast, about 2,300 customers were without power as heavy rains hit the area late Monday, according to the Jacksonville Energy Authority.

Colin is expected to produce rainfall amounts of 3 to 6 inches, and forecasters said up to 8 inches are possible across north Florida, southeastern Georgia and coastal areas of the Carolinas through today.

Forecasters also described Colin as a lopsided storm, with tropical storm-force winds extending up to 185 miles east of its center.

Not everyone in Florida was hunkering down. About 50 people were in the water with surfboards off Treasure Island to take advantage of the rare 2- to 3-foot swells breaking in the Gulf's warm waters.

"It's like man against nature," said Derek Wiltison of Atlantic Beach. "Surfers tend to drop what they're doing -- work, relationships, whatever -- to go out and catch a wave."

A tropical storm warning was also in effect for the entire Georgia coast and the lower South Carolina coast.

"I want everyone to be safe," Scott said. "I've talked to utilities and sheriff's departments, but residents have to do their part."

Colin was expected to pass the Georgia coast before dawn today, said Dennis Jones, director of the Chatham County Emergency Management Agency.

Jones said flash floods appeared to pose the greatest threat, with the worst flood potential expected late today.

Allan Giese, 62, watched the start-and-stop rains Monday morning from his home about 150 yards from the St. Marys River, where he's seen larger storms bang up boats anchored in the nearby marina. He planned to bring his plywood work table inside, but otherwise simply ride out the storm inside with his wife.

"What it sounds like is just some heavy rains, but nothing torrential, not high winds," Giese said. "We'll just keep an eye on the tracker, go to bed and hunker down."

Information for this article was contributed by Russ Bynum, Joe Reedy and Nicole Ashley of The Associated Press.

A Section on 06/07/2016

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