The Columbus Dispatch

Police search for missing in wake of Ida flooding

- Mike Catalini and Michael R. Sisak

NEW YORK – Police went door to door in search of more possible victims and drew up lists of the missing as the death toll rose to 49 on Friday in the catastroph­ic flooding set off across the Northeast by the remnants of Hurricane Ida.

The disaster underscore­d with heartbreak­ing clarity how vulnerable the U.S. is to the extreme weather that climate change is bringing. In its wake, officials weighed far-reaching new measures to save lives in future storms.

More than three days after the hurricane blew ashore in Louisiana, Ida's rainy remains hit the Northeast with stunning fury on Wednesday and Thursday, submerging cars, swamping subway stations and basement apartments and drowning scores of people in five states.

Intense rain overwhelme­d urban drainage systems never meant to handle so much water in such a short time – a record 3 inches in just an hour in New York. Seven rivers in the Northeast reached their highest levels on record, Dartmouth University researcher Evan Dethier said.

On Friday, communitie­s labored to haul away ruined vehicles, pump out homes and highways, clear muck and other debris and restore mass transit.

Even after clouds gave way to blue skies, some rivers and streams were still rising. Part of the swollen Passaic River in New Jersey wasn't expected to crest until Friday night.

“People think it's beautiful out, which it is, that this thing's behind us and we can go back to business as usual, and we're not there yet,” New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy warned.

At least 25 people perished in New Jersey, the most of any state. Most drowned after their vehicles were caught in flash floods. A family of three and their neighbor were killed as 12 to 14 feet of water filled their apartments in Elizabeth, New Jersey.

Across the street, Jennifer Vilchez said she could hear people crying, “Help! Help!” from their windows.

At least six people remained missing in the state, Murphy said.

In New York City, 11 people died when they were unable to escape rising water in their low-lying apartments. A man, woman and 2-year-old boy perished as their Queens street turned into a raging gully, hemmed in by a concrete wall on the nearby Brooklyn-queens Expressway.

New York's subways ran Friday with delays or not at all. North of the city, commuter train service remained suspended or severely curtailed. In the Hudson Valley, train tracks were covered in several feet of mud.

Floodwater­s and a falling tree also took lives in Maryland, Pennsylvan­ia, Connecticu­t and New York.

While the storm ravaged homes and the electrical grid in Louisiana and Mississipp­i, leaving more than 800,000 people without power as of Friday, it seemingly proved more lethal over 1,000 miles away, where the Northeast death toll outstrippe­d the 13 lives reported lost so far in the Deep South.

Ida stands as the deadliest hurricane in the U.S. in four years.

In a second wave of calamity in the Northeast, fires broke out in swamped homes and businesses, many inaccessib­le to firefighters because of floodwaters.

 ?? MATT SLOCUM/AP ?? Downed power lines slump over a road in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida, Friday in Reserve, La.
MATT SLOCUM/AP Downed power lines slump over a road in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida, Friday in Reserve, La.

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