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Fay becomes post-tropical cyclone over eastern New York | TribLIVE.com
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Fay becomes post-tropical cyclone over eastern New York

Associated Press
2813029_web1_2813029-4eb1eedbf07d4c02ad77ea01f34924e7
AP
Pedestrians use umbrellas to protect themselves from inclement weather brought about by Tropical Storm Fay, Friday, in New York. Beaches closed in Delaware and rain lashed the New Jersey shore as fast-moving Tropical Storm Fay churned north on a path expected to soak the New York City region.
2813029_web1_2813029-31614664bbc94788b9c55ae0aafba3ae
AP
A man uses an umbrella to protect a baby from inclement weather brought about by Tropical Storm Fay, Friday, in New York.
2813029_web1_2813029-f7cde6beb6854cff903ca058a7bbbc64
AP
Pedestrians use umbrellas to protect themselves from inclement weather brought about by Tropical Storm Fay, Friday, in New York.
2813029_web1_2813029-7ccb675b23a4473ab490fcfc877f533c
AP
Pedestrians struggle to control their umbrellas due to inclement weather brought about by Tropical Storm Fay, Friday, in New York.

MIAMI — A tropical storm that brought heavy rain to mid-Atlantic states and southern New England was downgraded twice Saturday morning as is moved over New York, forecasters said.

Post-tropical cyclone Fay was about 30 miles south of Albany and had maximum sustained winds near 35 mph, the National Hurricane Center in Miami said in its 5 a.m. advisory. The forecasters said the advisory would be its last for the system that was expected to continue moving north Saturday.

Fay had closed beaches and flooded shore town streets after it made landfall as a tropical storm Friday afternoon in New Jersey. It weakened once it hit land and was expected to dissipate Sunday, forecasters said.

Forecasters again decreased expected rain totals from Fay. The post-tropical low was expected to produce 1 to 2 inches of rain, with flash flooding possible in some areas.

The forecast track put the system moving into western New England and then southeastern Canada later Saturday and into Sunday, forecasters said. No coastal watches or warnings were in effect for the system.

Fay was the earliest sixth-named storm on record, according to Colorado State University hurricane researcher Phil Klotzbach. The previous record was Franklin on July 22, 2005, Klotzbach tweeted.

Two named storms formed before the official June 1 start of the hurricane season. None of this season’s previous five named storms strengthened into hurricanes.

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Categories: News | U.S./World
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