The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

» Tropical Storm Henri socks Northeast with wind, rain,

Heavy, sustained rains raise concerns about flooding before storm moves back to ocean.

- By David Klepper, Michael Kunzelman and David Porter

WESTERLY, R.I. — Tropical Storm Henri socked the Northeast with heavy wind and rain as it made landfall Sunday on the coast of Rhode Island, knocking out power to over 100,000 homes and causing deluges that closed bridges, swamped roads and left many people stranded in their vehicles.

The storm was downgraded from a hurricane before reaching New England, leaving many to breathe a sigh of relief in a region that has not taken a direct hit from a hurricane in decades. There were few early reports of major damage due to wind or surf.

the storm’s heavy, sustained rains raised concerns about flooding from the storm that threatened to stall over the region before pivoting to the East and moving out to the Atlantic Ocean tonight. Some of the highest rain totals were expected inland.

President Joe Biden on Sunday promised to provide federal help as quickly as possible to the residents of northeaste­rn states affected by Tropical Storm Henri. The president declared disasters in much of the region, opening the purse strings for federal recovery aid.

By Sunday evening, Henri had sustained winds of about 40 mph as it moved inland across Connecticu­t, according to the National Hurricane Center. When it made landfall near Westerly, Rhode Island, it had sustained winds of about 60 mph and gusts of up to 70 mph.

Bridges briefly close

Several major bridges in Rhode Island, which stitch together much of the state, were briefly shuttered Sunday, and some coastal roads were nearly impassable.

In Newport, Paul and Cherie Saunders were riding out the storm in a home that her family has owned since the late 1950s. Their basement flooded with 5 feet of water during Superstorm Sandy nine years ago.

“This house has been through so many hurricanes and so many things have happened,” said Cherie Saunders, 68. “We’re just going to wait and see what happens.”

Rhode Island has been hit by hurricanes and tropical storms periodical­ly — including Superstorm Sandy in 2012, Irene in 2011 and Hurricane Bob in 1991. The city of Providence sustained so much flooding damage from a hurricane in 1938 and Hurricane Carol in 1954 that it built a hurricane barrier in the 1960s to protect its downtown from a storm surge coming up Narraganse­tt Bay. That barrier — and newer gates built nearby — were closed Sunday.

Record rainfall for 1 hour

The National Weather Service recorded what couldbe the wettest hour ever in New York City’s Central Park, with 1.94 inches of torrential rainfall pelting the park between 10 p.m. and 11 p.m. Saturday. Earlier in the evening, thousands attending a concert at the park were forced to disperse because of heavy rainfall.

The weekend was the wettest two-day period in New York City since Tropical Storm Irene swept through a decade ago, said Dominic Ramunni, a National Weather Service meteorolog­ist in Upton, New York.

“I call it the wettest hour in New York City, New York, for the record books,” Ramunni said.

Some communitie­s in central New Jersey were inundated with as much as 8 inches of rain by midday Sunday. In Jamesburg, television video footage showed flooded downtown streets and cars almost completely submerged.

In Newark,public Safety Director Brian O’hara said police and firefighte­rs rescued 86 people in 11 incidents related to the storm. He said “significan­t flooding” led to multiple vehicles submerged in flooded areas.

Worst still to come

In a region where the ground in many areas is saturated from recent rains, the forecast had some fearing the worst effects of the rainfall were still to come.

Marshall Shepherd, director of the atmospheri­c sciences program at the University of Georgia and former president of the American Meteorolog­ical Society, said Henri was reminiscen­t in some ways of Hurricane Harvey, a slow-moving storm that decimated the Houston area in 2017.

the west side of the storm, you have a banding feature that has literally been stationary — sitting there and dumping rain. That will be a significan­t hazard for the New York and New Jersey area,” Shepherd said.

Some in New England cautioned against complacenc­y, warning that Henri — if it does stall and dump multiple inches of rainfall — had the potential to inflict damage similar to Tropical Storm Irene in August 2011, which killed six in Vermont, left thousands homeless, and damaged or destroyed more than 200 bridges and 500 miles of highway.

“I remember Irene and media outlets outside Vermont brushing it aside as if no big deal while it hit Vermont,” Robert Welch, a podcaster, tweeted Sunday. “I’ll relax when I see it at sea on radar.”

In Connecticu­t, four nursing homes on the shoreline were evacuated, according to Paul Mounds, chief of staff for Connecticu­t’s governor. About 250 residents were relocated to other nursing homes, he said. Storm-related flooding was blamed for major delays along Interstate 91 near Hartford.

Cuomo at the helm

In one of his final appearance­s as governor before he is set to step down at the end today over a sexual harassment scandal, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said that with the threat to Long Island diminishin­g, the state’s primary concern were inland areas like the Hudson River Valley, north of New York City, which was projected to get inches of rain over the next few days.

Rainfall in the Catskills “is a significan­t problem,” Cuomo said. “In the Hudson Valley you have hills, you have creeks, the water comes running down those hills and turns a creek into a ravaging river. I have seen small towns in these mountainou­s areas devastated by rain. That is still a very real possibilit­y.”

 ?? CRAIG RUTTLE/AP ?? Waves pound the seawall in Montauk, N.Y., as Tropical Storm Henri blows in Sunday. The weekend was the wettest two-day period in New York City since Tropical Storm Irene a decade ago.
CRAIG RUTTLE/AP Waves pound the seawall in Montauk, N.Y., as Tropical Storm Henri blows in Sunday. The weekend was the wettest two-day period in New York City since Tropical Storm Irene a decade ago.

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