A decision regarding Wednesday’s operations will be made based on storm impacts. All emergency essential services including public safety, water and sewer, stormwater, park and tree, and traffic engineering will respond at full capacity as weather permits.
- All non-emergency essential City government offices will be closed.
- In-person payments at the Coastal Georgia Center for utility, tax, license, and other fees will be closed.
- Street cleaning night services will be suspended.
- The Dean Forest Landfill and Bacon Park Convenience Center will be closed.
- Sanitation routes will shift to a modified schedule on Wednesday.
- The Recorder's Court will be closed.
- In-person services with the Office of Special Events, Film, and Tourism will be suspended.
- Building closures, including all services within, will include City Hall, Civic Center, Community Centers, Cultural Arts Center, Floyd Adams City Services Complex, Savannah Municipal Services Annex and the Savannah Entrepreneurial Center.
The greatest impact to Chatham County will be heavy rainfall, with a potential for 10-20 inches of rain and severe flash flooding.
11 pm EDT: #Debby becomes a hurricane as it nears landfall in Florida. Debby expected to be a major flood event for the southeast U.S. Here are the Key Messages. Visit https://t.co/tW4KeGdBFb for details. pic.twitter.com/g2Et30zWXN
— National Hurricane Center (@NHC_Atlantic) August 5, 2024
On Sunday night as Savannah prepared for Debby’s imminent arrival, Mayor Van Johnson hosted a livestream on Facebook that lasted for more than 50 minutes and featured Q&A segments with City Manager Jay Melder and Savannah Fire Department Chief Elzie Kitchen, among others.
Johnson and Melder each referred to the storm as a “thousand-year flood event,” and Johnson answered one viewer’s question about limiting the movement of residents on the roads of Savannah by saying he was “considering a curfew” but was awaiting Melder’s approval before doing so.
UPDATE (11pm, Aug. 4)
The National Weather Service elevated Debby to a Category 1 Hurricane with sustained wind speeds of up to 75 mph and at a location approximately 100 miles WNW of Tampa, Florida.