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southern Florida peninsula in 4.5 hours, with the center <br /> emerging into the Atlantic just southeast of Jupiter. Maximum <br /> winds had decreased to near 109 mph (Category 2)during the <br /> crossing of Florida. Because the hurricane moved quickly <br /> across the southern Florida peninsula, however, the rain <br /> amounts were not very large in Florida and storm totals ranged <br /> generally from 3 to 7 inches. Some locations in southeast <br /> Florida had totals of only 1 to 2 inches -- or less. Wilma <br /> produced 10 tornadoes over the Florida peninsula on 23-24 <br /> October: one each in Collier, Hardee, Highlands, Indian River, <br /> Okeechobee, and Polk Counties, and four in Brevard County. <br /> Tropical Storm Ernesto of August 2006. Ernesto <br /> made landfall at Plantation Key, Florida, in the upper Florida <br /> Keys, as a tropical storm with winds of 46 mph. The storm <br /> moved northward along the center of the Florida peninsula and <br /> within a weakness in the mid-level ridge, and the cyclone <br /> passed over Lake Okeechobee gradually turning and emerging <br /> over the Atlantic Ocean near Cape Canaveral, Florida. The <br /> storm dropped 3-6 inches of rain in many areas near the path <br /> of the storm's center, from the Cape Canaveral area to Lake <br /> Okeechobee, in portions of southwestern Florida, and in <br /> isolated spots in the Upper Florida Keys. <br /> Tropical Storm Fay of September 2008. Fay was a <br /> long-lived tropical storm that made eight landfalls—including a <br /> record four landfalls in Florida (Key West, Cape Romano, <br /> Flagler Beach and Carrabelle) — and produced torrential <br /> rainfall that caused extensive floods across the Dominican <br /> Republic, Haiti, Cuba, and Florida. Heavy rainfall was the most <br /> notable hazard caused by Tropical Storm Fay. Melbourne, <br /> Florida broke a 50-year old record for a rainfall event. There <br /> were numerous rainfall reports of more than 20 in reported <br /> across east-central Florida and amounts in excess of 10 in <br /> were common elsewhere across the central and northern <br /> Florida. <br /> Tropical Storm Isaac(August 26-27, 2012). Persistent <br /> heavy rainbands from Tropical Storm Isaac produced <br /> widespread urban and lowland flooding across much of the <br /> county. Rainfall from the morning of August 26 until the <br /> evening of August 27 averaged 4 to 8 inches, with isolated <br /> totals of 14 to 17 inches, most of which fell during the morning <br /> and afternoon of August 27. The most significant impacts <br /> Indian River County Comprehensive Emergency Management Plan Basic Page 22 <br />