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Damage to a church under construction in New Port Richey. The hurricane also brought extensive impact to portions of Pasco County. In New Port Richey, a few churches suffered severe damage or were destroyed. Nearly all walls collapsed and many windows were shattered at the school house.
September 5 – Hurricane Frances made landfall along the southern end of Hutchinson Island as a Category 2 hurricane, and moved slowly across the state, making a second landfall along the gulf coast near New Port Richey. Wind gusts reached 108 mph (174 km/h) at Fort Pierce.
18 New Port Richey-Tarpon Springs; 19 Bayonet Point-Tarpon Springs; 20 Shady Hills; 21 Scheer Commerce Center-Gulf View Square; 23 Gulf View Sq. Mall-Universal Plaza; 25 Chelsea Place -Gulf View Sq. Mall; East County Routes: 30 Trilby-Zephyrhills; 31 Pasco–Hernando State College-Dade City-Clinton-Dade City
Former segments of SR 52, have included Roth Lane, in Saint Leo, and North 21st Street and Lock Street in Dade City. To address recent growth in Pasco County, SR 52 was realigned onto a 7-mile (11 km), four-lane, divided highway alignment south of the previous winding two-lane highway alignment through San Antonio and St. Leo, between I-75 and US 98 and US 301.
Rapidly weakening, Frances fell to Category 1 intensity around midday and deteriorated to a tropical storm about six hours later. On September 6, the storm emerged into the Gulf of Mexico near New Port Richey, before another landfall at the mouth of the Aucilla River with winds of 65 mph (105 km/h).
Additionally, a tornado near New Port Richey caused major damage to five homes. [1] Throughout the county, damage to private property was $1.5 million, while public property losses were estimated at $26 million. [24] Mesocyclone tracks associated with the outer rainbands of Tropical Storm Debby across Florida on June 24.
In New Port Richey, a car was crushed by a tree; a mobile home suffered the same fate in Dade City, as did a home in Croom-A-Coochee. [64] [65] [66] Effects along the western coast of Florida were limited with heavy rain and storm surge virtually non-existent; damage was estimated at $50,000. [67]
From June 23 to 26, 2012, Tropical Storm Debby produced a significant tornado outbreak across the Florida Peninsula.Throughout the entire event, 25 tornadoes touched down across the state, making the outbreak the second largest on record in Florida, behind only that spawned by Hurricane Agnes, which produced 28 tornadoes from June 18 to 19, 1972. [4]
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