Tropical Storm Emily was downgraded to a depression Monday night, but forecasters say they expect the storm to gain strength and be reclassified as a tropical storm as it moves away from Florida over the Atlantic.
The storm landed on Anna Maria Island, an island off Florida’s west coast near Bradenton, around 10:45 a.m. Monday. It brought winds of 45 mph and several inches of rain.
Gov. Rick Scott declared a state of emergency for 31 counties in southern and central Florida.
Forecasters say the center of the storm should move off the east coast of Florida around midnight Monday. It is expected to regain tropical storm strength over ocean water.
Power outages plague Florida residents
According to data from Scott’s office, 7,868 residents were still without power as of Monday night.
At the height of the storm, about 18,000 residents were without power, Scott said.
The National Hurricane Center canceled tropical storm warnings for the state’s west coast. Six Florida counties were under tropical storm warning on Monday afternoon, including Pinellas, Sarasota and Lee.
Residents will continue to see heavy rain
Despite the storm’s downgrade, forecasters said residents will continue to see rainfall throughout the night.
Emily dumped nearly 4 inches of rain in Sarasota, less than 2 inches in Naples and less than an inch in Miami.
In some isolated areas, such as the town of Valrico, east of Tampa, as much as 8 inches of rain fell in 48 hours, according to the National Weather Service.
Residents in southwest Florida and along the west coast of central Florida could see another 2 to 4 inches of rain.
Most of the rain will be over by midnight on Monday, forecasters say, with weather returning to normal by Tuesday.
In a statement released Monday, Scott urged residents to be prepared for hurricane season. The governor and Florida Division of Emergency Management Director Bryan Koon advised people to visit the FL GetAPlan.com website for resources and information.
“While this storm developed quickly overnight and will swiftly move across our state, storms can always develop rapidly and that is why it is so important to be prepared at the start of hurricane season,” Scott said.