The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

East Coast eyes flooding

Rain, snow, high wind expected as storm moves up Eastern seaboard

- By Sarah Betancourt

BOSTON » Airlines, officials and residents braced Thursday for potentiall­y widespread coastal flooding from a major Nor’easter bearing down on a large swath of the East coast.

Heavy rain, intermitte­nt snow and high winds with gusts exceeding 50 miles per hour are expected as the storm moves up the Eastern seaboard, beginning in New York and Connecticu­t on Thursday evening.

Massachuse­tts Gov. Charlie Baker activated 200 National Guard members to help with the storm. “We’re expecting to see more severe flooding issues here than we did in the Jan. 4 storm,” when a Nor’easter lashed the region with heavy snow and rain, he said.

Locals were taking matters into their own hands. In Duxbury, south of Boston, officials

urged residents to evacuate as soon as possible, and the fire department was preparing to use a high water rescue vehicle for the first time to help any residents who wind up stuck in homes during high floodwater­s.

Michelle Shaffer, 45, of the coastal Massachuse­tts town of Hull, lost her appliances under 5 feet of water during the last big storm.

“I have a new washer, and my boyfriend just built a wooden platform for it. We got a couple of sump pumps,” said Shaffer, who planned to evacuate to high ground Thursday night. “This storm is going to be worse because it’s going over three high tides,” she said.

The Coast Guard advised boaters to exercise “vigilance and extreme caution.”

In New Jersey, officials worried that the storm could take a chunk out of beaches just south of Atlantic City that are still being repaired because of damage from previous storms.

Across the East Coast, authoritie­s told residents of coastal communitie­s to be prepared to evacuate if necessary in advance of Friday morning’s high tide. The National Weather Service said all of Rhode Island was under flood and high wind watches from Friday through Sunday morning.

Airlines were making their own preparatio­ns. Delta, Southwest, JetBlue, and American Airlines were allowing travelers to change their Friday and Saturday flights ahead of time to avoid delays and cancellati­ons at key airports across the Northeast.

Regional power utilities said they had extra crews on standby to deal with expected outages.

 ?? GREG DERR — THE QUINCY PATRIOT LEDGER VIA AP ?? John Woodland fills a sandbag to use at his home, Thursday in Scituate, Mass., ahead of Friday’s expected storm, predicted to bring high winds and the potential for coastal flooding.
GREG DERR — THE QUINCY PATRIOT LEDGER VIA AP John Woodland fills a sandbag to use at his home, Thursday in Scituate, Mass., ahead of Friday’s expected storm, predicted to bring high winds and the potential for coastal flooding.
 ?? GREG DERR — THE QUINCY PATRIOT LEDGER VIA AP ?? Residents and business owners collect sandbags, Thursday in Scituate, Mass., ahead of Friday’s expected storm.
GREG DERR — THE QUINCY PATRIOT LEDGER VIA AP Residents and business owners collect sandbags, Thursday in Scituate, Mass., ahead of Friday’s expected storm.

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