Arab Times

Death toll rises after Ida remnants hit NE

-

NEW YORK, Sept 2, (AP): The remnants of Hurricane Ida inundated large swaths of the northeaste­rn U.S. with historic and unanticipa­ted fury Wednesday night, killing at least 14 people in flooding in New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvan­ia as basement apartments suddenly filled with water, rivers and creeks swelled to record levels and roadways turned into car-swallowing canals.

Eight people died when they became trapped in flooded basements, New York City police said. Five people were found dead in an apartment complex in Elizabeth, New Jersey, the city’s mayor and spokespers­on told local media. Outside Philadelph­ia, officials reported “multiple fatalities,” saying no additional details were immediatel­y available.

The ferocious storm also spawned tornadoes, including one that ripped apart homes and toppled silos in Mullica Hill, New Jersey, south of Philadelph­ia.

“I had the hope they would get out. It happened so fast,” said Deborah Torres, who lives on the first floor of a building in Queens where three people died in a basement apartment.

Water from record rainfall cascaded into New York City subway tunnels, trapping at least 17 trains and forcing the cancelatio­n of service throughout the night and early morning. Videos online showed riders standing on seats in cars filled with water. All riders were evacuated safely, officials said.

Thursday morning, the nation’s largest city was slow to recover from catastroph­ic flooding that was reminiscen­t of Superstorm Sandy in 2012.

The National Weather Service recorded 3.15 inches (8.91 centimeter­s) of rain in Central Park in one hour Wednesday night, far surpassing the previous recorded high of 1.94 inches (4.92 centimeter­s) that fell in one hour during Henri on Aug. 21. Scientists have warned such weather extremes will be more common with man-made global warming.

Major flooding along the Schuylkill River in Pennsylvan­ia swamped highways, submerged cars and disrupted rail service in the Philadelph­ia area. In a tweet, city officials predicted “historic flooding” on Thursday as river levels continue to rise. The riverside community of Manayunk remained largely under water.

Rescuers

The rain in the tri-state area ended by daybreak Thursday as rescuers searched for more stranded people and braced for potentiall­y finding more bodies.

“We’re enduring an historic weather event tonight with record breaking rain across the city, brutal flooding and dangerous conditions on our roads,” New York Mayor Bill de Blasio said while declaring a state of emergency in New York City late Wednesday.

Police in Connecticu­t were investigat­ing a report of a person missing due to the flooding in Woodbury. In Passaic, New Jersey, a 70-year-old man was swept away after his family was rescued from their car.

Among the other deaths reported in New York City, a 48-year-old woman and a 66-year-old man died after being found at separate residences, and a 43-year-old woman and a 22-year-old man both died after being found inside a home. Causes of death and identifica­tions were pending.

Heavy winds and drenching rains collapsed the roof of a U.S. Postal Service building in New Jersey and threatened to overrun a dam in Pennsylvan­ia.

In New York City, officials banned travel for all but emergency vehicles until early Thursday and warned against unnecessar­y travel into the morning. The FDR Drive in Manhattan, and the Bronx River Parkway were under water during the storm. Garbage bobbed in the water rushing down streets. Some subway and rail service had resumed Thursday morning.

The National Weather Service office in New York issued its first-ever set of flash flood emergencie­s in the region Wednesday night, alerts only sent in the most dangerous conditions. An emergency was issued Aug. 22 in Waverly, Tennessee, when flooding in the town and surroundin­g county killed 20 people after the rainfall in one day shattered the state record.

That was the start of a deadly two weeks across the nation. Wildfires are threatenin­g Lake Tahoe, Tropical Storm Henri struck the Northeast and Ida struck Louisiana as the fifth-strongest storm to ever hit the U.S. mainland, leaving 1 million people without power, maybe for weeks.

 ??  ?? Blasio
Blasio

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait