Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Ida’s remnants continue to wreak havoc

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HURLEY, Va. – The remnants of Hurricane Ida blew into New England on Wednesday, dumping rain and causing floods that prompted hundreds of people to flee or be rescued from damaged homes in Maryland and Virginia.

A teenager was killed and two people were unaccounte­d for in the storm’s wake, and some schools in the storm’s path closed early.

The National Weather Service also tentativel­y confirmed the touchdown of a tornado in Maryland’s Anne Arundel County, which sits along the Chesapeake Bay. Meteorolog­ist Ray Martin said there have been reports of damage in the communitie­s of Riva and Woodland Beach. A tornado watch remained in effect for the Washington­Baltimore region for Wednesday afternoon.

In Pennsylvan­ia, emergency officials rushed to evacuate about 3,000 people downstream from a dam near Johnstown, on Wednesday after hours of heavy rains triggered plans to ensure the safety of downstream residents. Cambria County emergency management director and 911 center head Art Martynuska said the water level at the Wilmore dam reached the height that required evacuation.

There was also a chance that people living below the nearby Hinckston Run Dam would be evacuated, he said, as drenching downpours inundated rivers, streams and creeks.

The National Weather Service had predicted these floods, saying steep terrain and even city streets were particular­ly vulnerable to a band of severe weather that extended from the Appalachia­ns into Massachuse­tts.

Flash flooding knocked about 20 homes off their foundation­s and washed several trailers away in Virginia’s mountainou­s western corner, where about 50 people were rescued and hundreds were evacuated. News outlets reported that one person was still unaccounte­d for in the small mountain community of Hurley.

Water had almost reached the ceilings of basement units when crews arrived at an apartment complex in Rockville, Maryland, on Wednesday. A 19year-old was found dead, another person was missing, and about 200 people from 60 apartments near Rock Creek were displaced, Montgomery County Fire Chief Scott Goldstein said Wednesday.

“In many years I have not seen circumstan­ces like this,” Goldstein said.

Maryland schools planned to close early ahead of the weather in the city of Baltimore and Howard and Harford counties.

The old mining town of Hurley, Virginia, where one person was unaccounte­d for, was built in a narrow draw between two mountains where Lester Fork flows into Knox Creek.

Hurley has been badly damaged by floods before. Two shelters were set up for the people displaced, the Buchanan County sheriff’s office said.

The remnants of Hurricane Ida, which devastated parts of southern Louisiana and Mississipp­i, were forecast to dump rain from the central Appalachia­ns into New England on Wednesday, with up to 8 inches possible in spots from Pennsylvan­ia to Massachuse­tts.

Ida became a post-tropical storm Wednesday, losing its swirling center, but more severe weather and even tornadoes were in the forecast, with a tornado watch issued for the Appalachia­ns through western Virginia and northern North Carolina.

The forecast also warned of significant and life-threatenin­g flash flooding, especially in cities and areas of steep terrain, and major river flooding was predicted from northern West Virginia through New Jersey, particular­ly in the Monongahel­a, Potomac, Susquehann­a, Delaware, and lower Hudson river basins.

The Virginia National Guard has been helping with the flood response, with 10 soldiers with tactical trucks staging at the state Department of Emergency Management command post in Hurley and helping people get to safety, the guard said in a news release.

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