Albany Times Union

Nor’easter brings hurricane-force winds to coast

Fallen power lines leave thousands without electricit­y

- By Ellen Barry

Something extreme happened in order to cause this much damage.”

James Marathas, executive director of the Quincy Housing Authority

Boston Hurricane-force winds from an early-season nor’easter swept through coastal New England on Wednesday, a day after battering the New York City area, sending trees crashing onto power lines and cutting electricit­y to hundreds of thousands of households.

The winds, which gusted to 94 mph on Martha’s Vineyard in the predawn hours, picked up a small aircraft at the New Bedford Regional Airport, lifting it over a fence and onto a roadway, and peeled the roof off an apartment building in Quincy, Massachuse­tts, snapping the 8-inch bolts that held it down.

“Something extreme happened in order to cause this much damage,” James Marathas, executive director of the Quincy Housing Authority, told Boston’s Channel 7 News.

Scores of Massachuse­tts communitie­s canceled school for the day, and subway and commuter rail service was delayed while employees removed debris and fallen trees from the tracks. At 7 p.m., more than 400,000 customers in Massachuse­tts, nearly 50,000 in Rhode Island and about 3,000 in Connecticu­t were without power, according to Poweroutag­e.us, which aggregates data from utilities across the country.

The Weather Service in Boston warned coastal residents, “For your safety indoors, stay away from windows!” It said the Nantucket area had experience­d a bomb cyclone, an explosive deepening of pressure that can lead to powerful wind gusts.

Overnight winds surpassed any recorded this year, said M.L. Baron, who operates a weather station in Fairhaven, Massachuse­tts. Had it occurred during the winter, the storm would have been a “catastroph­ic blizzard,” he said, setting back the region for weeks. Still, he said, coastal areas saw “the damage and destructio­n hurricanef­orce winds can deliver.”

Shortly before 5 a.m., Baron listened as two men on a boat docked near New Bedford, Massachuse­tts, called the Coast Guard for a rescue, because the dock had disintegra­ted, and live power lines were in the water around them. “They were trapped; they couldn’t get off the boat,” he said, until rescuers carried them safely to land.

Coastal communitie­s were buffeted by winds overnight, and residents awoke to widespread power outages and downed trees. The fire department in Duxbury, Massachuse­tts, reported receiving 90 distress calls overnight and warned residents against trying to navigate the roads.

In Cohasset, Massachuse­tts, winds smashed the press box at a high school football stadium to splinters. A tree was uprooted on Boston’s historic Beacon Hill, peeling the brickpaved sidewalk like a ribbon. Timothy Cox, the Fair Haven harbormast­er, spent Wednesday afternoon retrieving boats that had broken from their moorings and come to rest on land.

“This morning it was pretty crazy,” he said.

National Grid, an energy provider for New York, Rhode Island and Massachuse­tts, dispatched 2,400 field personnel to repair damaged wires, poles and transmissi­on lines, the company said in a statement, describing “significan­t impact to our system” that could last days in some places.

The same storm struck the New York City area Tuesday with heavy rain, strong winds and the threat of flash floods, although the region was largely spared the type of deadly extreme weather brought by the remnants of Hurricane Ida last month.

Roads flooded across the region, with flood warnings in effect through Wednesday for the Saddle River in Lodi, New Jersey, and for the Ramapo River in northern New Jersey and Orange and Rockland Counties in New York.

New Yorkers woke up Wednesday to dry skies, but gusty winds. As of Wednesday evening, only about 1,000 New York homes were without power, according to Poweroutag­e.us. And public transit was running smoothly, with few unplanned delays.

Another storm was set to bring heavy rain to the Northeast early in the weekend, after sweeping across the country’s midsection with gusty wind and thundersto­rms Thursday and Friday. In eastern Texas and Louisiana on Wednesday, a strong storm led to a series of tornado warnings and sightings, but no reports of widespread damage.

 ?? M. Scott Brauer / New York Times ?? A downed tree at a home in Hingham, Mass. on Wednesday. After soaking the New York region, a nor’easter brought hurricane-force winds to parts of Massachuse­tts and caused widespread power outages in New England.
M. Scott Brauer / New York Times A downed tree at a home in Hingham, Mass. on Wednesday. After soaking the New York region, a nor’easter brought hurricane-force winds to parts of Massachuse­tts and caused widespread power outages in New England.

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