The Guardian (USA)

Pennsylvan­ia flash flood: five people killed and two children missing

- Edward Helmore

Five people have been killed and two children remained missing after floodwater­s tore through parts of south-eastern Pennsylvan­ia over the week during the latest round of violent storms to hit the region.

The family of the two children, a nine-month-old boy and his two-yearold sister, were caught in their car on the way to a barbecue on Saturday, the chief of the Upper Makefield fire department, Tim Brewer, said on Sunday. Their mother was later found dead while their father and young sibling “miraculous­ly” made it to safety.

Four other people were also killed by flooding in the Bucks county area, authoritie­s have said. None of the victims have been identified.

The number of dead from storms in that area has risen in recent days. Officials initially said at least three had died but warned that the number could increase.

“Mass casualty incidents like these … [are] unbelievab­ly devastatin­g to all the families involved,” Brewer said. “We are all grieving.”

South-eastern Pennsylvan­ia is only the latest area in the US to be hit by intense rain and flooding as the worldwide climate emergency worsens.

Last week, Montepelie­r in Vermont was inundated after being hit by two months’ worth of rain over several hours. That same storm washed out parts of New York’s Hudson Valley, killing a 35-year-old woman.

Over the last month, parts of the north-east have received 200% to 300% of their average monthly rainfall. The rains that hit Pennsylvan­ia on Saturday progressed to the New York region on Sunday.

New York’s governor, Kathy Hochul, advised New Yorkers to avoid unnecessar­y travel.

“This rainfall is much more dangerous because the ground is already saturated,” she said. “A flash flood doesn’t give you warning. It comes literally in a flash.

“And in those moments, your car can go from a place of safety to a place of death.”

A climate scientist and distinguis­hed professor at the University of Pennsylvan­ia, Michael Mann, told CNN that atmospheri­c changes due to a warming climate were “supercharg­ing” natural weather events.

“Sure, weather is weather,” Mann said. “It’s going to happen – rainfall, flooding events are going to happen. What climate change is doing is it’s supercharg­ing them, so when you get one of those weather systems that’s producing large amounts of rainfall, you get more rainfall.”

Flooding in the north-east comes as more than 100 million Americans are under heat warnings. On Sunday, temperatur­es in Death Valley, which runs along part of central California’s border with Nevada, reached 128F (53.3C), only two degrees short of record temperatur­e records in the subsea level valley or anywhere else on Earth.

 ?? Photograph: Tom Gralish/AP ?? A road is closed in Upper Makefield, Pennsylvan­ia, on Sunday following fatal flash flooding on Saturday.
Photograph: Tom Gralish/AP A road is closed in Upper Makefield, Pennsylvan­ia, on Sunday following fatal flash flooding on Saturday.

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