New Ross Standard

DEVASTATIO­N AS HURRICANE SLAMS INTO NEW ROSS

‘Widespread damage’ as Ophelia brings down trees and power lines

- By DAVID TUCKER

WINDS gusting at over 100 km/h caused devastatio­n across the New Ross district on Monday afternoon, damaging homes and felling scores of trees and power lines.

New Ross District Manager Sinead Casey said: ‘ The damage has been widespread. We’ve had fallen trees on the N25 at Lake Region and Carrigbyrn­e and down along the peninsula. There have been road closures and fallen power lines.’

Traffic ground to a halt on the N25 before O’Hanrahan Bridge in New Ross from the Waterford side due to fallen debris by 4 p.m.

Ms Casey said most people were being sensible by not going outdoors.

STORM FORCE winds gusted across the district on Monday afternoon, felling trees and power lines, smashing windows and damaging roofs of old properties in New Ross.

Winds of more than 100 km/h were reported as Storm Ophelia beared down on the area from 1.30 p.m. throughout the afternoon.

The N25 was littered with debris before O’Hanrahan Bridge in New Ross from the Waterford side by 4 p.m. and Duncannon experience­d storm surge tides.

Speaking from the hurricane coordinati­on centre at County Hall in Wexford, District Manager Sinead Casey said: ‘ The damage has been widespread. We’ve had fallen trees on the N25 at Lake Region and Carrigbyrn­e and down along the peninsula. There have been road closures and fallen power lines. The south coast is being hammered. The winds in Wexford are Force 8 to Force 9 gusting at Force 11, hurricane levels.’

Ms Casey said most people across the district were being sensible by not going outdoors. The ESB reported fallen power lines at Marsh Lane, New Ross, Mount Misery, Slaught, Begerin and Slieverue by 3 p.m. Sergeant Eddie Wilde said: ‘None of them can be repaired until the hurricane dies down. Thank God there have no accidents so far. Strong winds have blown debris from houses and blown in windows in New Ross and still people are out walking around.’

New Ross Municipal District Executive Engineer Abraham Dunne said 50 council staff were stood down on standby during the storm. Numerous reports of fallen trees were made throughout the afternoon from across the district, but the road crew was unable to get to clear most of them until the storm abated. Mr Dunne said a storm swell of 0.8m was reported and council staff were busy monitoring the tide ahead of the high tide at 4 p.m.

2,000 sandbags were available in the district in the event of flooding.

Mr Dunne said: ‘ The 2010 flood protection measures and the new flood protection measures are in place in Marshmeado­ws, but not in Rosbercon. We have sandbags at the entrance to the boat club.’

Large parts of New Ross town were shrouded in darkness over the weekend due to an ESB power outage, presaging expected outages arising from Hurricane Ophelia. Numerous street lights were out across the town from early on Saturday and the hurricane brought further woes for households. Hurriance Ophelia - which was described as unpreceden­ted in the country in living memory, for most - led to the closure of all schools across the district, along with shops, creches, banks, the Dunbrody Visitor Centre, New Ross Credit Union, the Apex leisure centre, several public buildings and services including Meals on Wheels. The North Gate Medical Centre was open for emegencies only. It was announced on Monday afternoon that schools would remain closed today (Tuesday) also.

Thousands of employees could not attend work, while hundreds of Lake Region staff were informed they could go home on Monday morning. The town of New Ross and villages across the district were largely abandoned from around 10 a.m. with very light traffic reported on the roads.

The first sign of damage from Hurricane Ophelia was a fallen tree on Cherries Road followed swiftly by reports of a tree blocking the New Ross to The Rower road.

Fears that hurricane winds would wreak havoc on homes and businesses saw massive queues at supermarke­ts in the district on Sunday, as people feared they would have to remain in doors for lengthy periods due to the strong winds. Met Eireann issued a status red alert for Wexford and Waterford on Sunday afternoon,

The last major storm to affect the area was Storm Darwin in February 2014 when a large section of the roof of The Apex was blown off in 114 km/h winds, landing on the grounds of Good Counsel College. Damage was also caused to the Albatros fertiliser plant that day, while trees were felled. Emergency services were on high alert in the area on Monday including gardaí, firemen, staff members of New Ross Municipal District council and Wexford Civil Defence. People living or visiting coastal areas were advised to stay away from the sea and cliffs.

There was no postal service for the first time in decades.

county Wexford battened down the hatches yesterday (Monday) as the worst storm in 50 years lashed the county with winds of up to 130 km/h.

With a Red Alert in force in the county, all schools and most preschool/creche facilities were closed, most public transport was not running, buses and trains were cancelled, ferries were cancelled, and public events planned for Monday night were called off.

By early afternoon, winds were sweeping across most parts of the county with those along the coast worst affected.

Hurricane Ophelia – or what was left of it – was the most severe weather event to hit Ireland since Hurricane Debbie hit in 1961 - resulting in 15 deaths.

Wexford County Council said widespread flooding was not anticipate­d, however, it had stockpiled more than 5,000 sandbags which were available if required throughout the county.

‘ The Council has significan­t resources available to it to deal with this event.

‘All our emergency staff, including fire service personnel, outdoor crews and senior staff of the Council are in place and available to deal with issues as they arise.

‘In addition, we have at our disposal resources from the Army and Civil Defence, while the Order of Malta has also offered assistance,’ the council said in a severe weather alert.

Hospital outpatient appointmen­ts were cancelled at hospitals throughout the county and region.

Acute health services were open as normal, but people were urged not to venture out during the storm period – due to go on into last night – unless absolutely necessary.

In Wexford town, Padraig O’Gorman, the senior executive officer in the council’s housing department, said arrangemen­ts had been made for rough sleepers to get a hot meal and a B&B or hotel room for last night.

Minister Paul Kehoe appealed to people ‘ not to make unnecessar­y journeys’ ahead of the havoc that Ophelia was expected to unleash and it appeared that most people had taken his advice.

The normally bustling town centre was largely deserted with all but a handful of people on the streets. Most of the larger stores closed, however, some smaller town centre stores braved it out until the last minute.

Minister for Transport, Shane Ross said all transport services were severely disrupted.

The Coast Guard asked people to avoid any visits or walks to coastal or cliff areas, and reiterated its core message of Stay Back, Stay High, Stay Dry.

All mariners were reminded to pay additional attention to the sea area forecasts, noting that as the centre of the weather system approached Ireland, localised changes are likely.

The ESB said that as of 12 noon yesterday, approximat­ely 120,000 electricit­y customers are without power.

By mid-afternoon, many thousands of County Wexford households were without power.

The ESB said the majority of customers who had lost power, would be without power overnight as crews struggled to restore supplies and it could take several days for power to be restored to some areas.

Crews from ESB Networks were ready to be dispatched to any affected areas without electricit­y supply, making the electricit­y network safe and assessing the damage, so that they can restore power as quickly and effectivel­y as possible.

The ESB issued the following warning to the general public: If you come across fallen wires or damaged electricit­y network, never, ever touch or approach these as they are live and extremely dangerous. Report any damage to electricit­y infrastruc­ture by calling 1850 372 999.

Minister for Foreign Affairs Simon Coveney said anybody not taking storm Orphelia seriously should think again.

‘I don’t remember ever seeing a forecast for the south coast quite like this,’ he said.

Met Eireann’s Gavin Gallagher said it was unusual to have such a strong storm system in this part of the world.

‘It’s the strongest hurricane in the Atlantic on record in history.’

HSE community services, mental health day centres, and day hospitals were closed as were day services for older people and people with disabiliti­es

The National Ambulance Service said it would prioritise emergency calls during the storm, but urged people to think carefully before calling.

‘It must be understood that our response to emergency calls may be hindered by road conditions and the number of emergency calls at any particular time. We will do our utmost to reach those in greatest need of our emergency services,’ it said.

Irish Water said it had incident plans in place and crews on standby to deal with the effects of the storm. It said it recognised that the predicted conditions are likely to result in power outages at critical water and wastewater installati­ons which could compromise service delivery.

Irish Water also warned that heavy rainfall may also increase the risk of flooding.

An afternoon announceme­nt confirmed that all schools across the country would remain closed today ( Tuesday).

Meanwhile, Rosslare Lifeboat was scrambled to rescue the crew of a yacht caught in the storm.

‘ We can’t figure out what they were doing out there in this weather,’ said Jamie Ryan, from Rosslare RNLI.

He said the yacht was under tow with the crew still on board.

‘ They are getting fairly well battered. It was too rough to take them off,’ he said.

The lifeboat crew was having to contend with Force 9 rising to Force 10 winds, gusting to 60 knots.

Cllr Ger Carthy said he wanted to commend the crew of the lifeboat for taking to sea and risking their lives in such conditions and their families.

The stricken yacht, which called in a Mayday off Blackwater Head, 10 miles north of Rosslare Europort, was due into Rosslare late in the afternoon.

 ??  ?? ABOVE: Fixing barriers on Mary Street ahead of Storm Ophelia; INSET: the majority of businesses in New Ross decided to close yesterday due to the storm
ABOVE: Fixing barriers on Mary Street ahead of Storm Ophelia; INSET: the majority of businesses in New Ross decided to close yesterday due to the storm
 ??  ?? Storm Ophelia batters Fethard Dock. Photo: Liam Ryan.
Storm Ophelia batters Fethard Dock. Photo: Liam Ryan.
 ??  ?? Council worker Niall O’NeIll replacing stolen lifebuoys on O’Hanrahan Bridge yesterday morning before the storm hit.
Council worker Niall O’NeIll replacing stolen lifebuoys on O’Hanrahan Bridge yesterday morning before the storm hit.
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 ??  ?? A sign on the door of TSB Bank on South Street informing customers of the closure.
A sign on the door of TSB Bank on South Street informing customers of the closure.

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