The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Hurricane Ida power outages, misery persist nine days later

Biden surveys N.Y. and N.J. storm damage, talks climate change

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MANVILLE, N.J. — Pointing accusingly at climate change, President Joe Biden toured deadly Northeast flood damage Tuesday and said he was thinking about the families who suffered “profound” losses from the powerful remnants of Hurricane Ida.

Biden traveled to New Jersey and New York City to survey the aftermath and call for federal spending to fortify infrastruc­ture to better defend people and property from future storms in the region and beyond. He spoke with distressed residents whose homes were badly damaged or destroyed amid the flood.

“Every part of the country, every part of the country is getting hit by extreme weather,” Biden said in a briefing at the Somerset County emergency management training center attended by federal, state and local officials, including New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy.

Biden said the threat from wildfires, hurricanes, tornadoes, flooding and other extreme weather must be dealt with in ways that will lessen the devastatin­g effects of climate change.

“We can’t turn it back very much, but we can prevent it from getting worse,“he said. Biden added that scientists have been warning for decades that this day would come and that urgent action was needed.

“We don’t have any more time,,“he said.

Biden’s plan to spend $1 trillion on infrastruc­ture nationwide is pending in Congress., and the White House asked Congress on Tuesday for an additional $24 billion to cover the costs of Hurricane Ida and other natural disasters.

In New Jersey, he also walked along a street in the Lost Valley neighborho­od of Manville, where cleanup continues after the Raritan River overflowed its banks. Many front lawns were covered with water-logged couches, pianos, crumbled plaster and other debris.

One home displayed a handpainte­d sign that said, “Manville will be back better.”

Biden, wearing a mask, spoke to adults and children, including Meagan Dommar, a new mother whose home was destroyed by fire as the flood occurred. She told the president that she and her husband, Caesar, had left because of the baby, then returned to find destructio­n.

“Thank God you’re safe,” Biden replied. As he walked the route, the Democrat was taunted by supporters of Republican former President Donald Trump, who yelled that Biden was a “tyrant” and worse. Biden did not look in their direction.

At the briefing, Biden focused on the personal calamities, saying, “The losses that we witnessed today are profound. My thoughts are with all those families affected by the storm and all those families who lost someone they love.”

Before he arrived, Cristel Alvarez said she expected losses at her home to climb as high as $45,000. She has lived in Manville for a decade and the flood was her family’s second. Alvarez said she planned to apply for federal assistance but also intended to move away.

“Let him see everything that we’re going through and hopefully we can get the help that we need because there’s a lot of loss,” she said.

Lou DeFazio, a contractor and three-decade resident of Manville, sat on his porch with a small Trump flag waving beside him and Kaycee, his dog barking through an open window. DeFazio said the town needs better planning instead of presidenti­al visits.

“I think their efforts could be better spent in other areas. I don’t know what they’re gonna do for us,” he said.

At least 50 people were killed in six Eastern states as record rainfall last week overwhelme­d rivers and sewer systems. Some people were trapped in fast-filling basement apartments and cars, or were swept away as they tried to escape. The storm also spawned several tornadoes.

More than half of the deaths, 27, were recorded in New Jersey. In New York City, 13 people were killed, including 11 in Queens.

Biden’s visit follows a Friday trip to Louisiana, where Hurricane Ida first made landfall, killing at least 13 people in the state and plunging New Orleans into darkness. Power is being slowly restored.

Manville, situated along New Jersey’s Raritan River, is almost always hard-hit by major storms. It was the scene of catastroph­ic flooding in 1998 as the remnants of Tropical Storm Floyd swept over New Jersey. It also sustained serious flooding during the aftermath of Hurricane Irene in 2011 and Superstorm Sandy in 2012.

Biden has approved major disaster declaratio­ns, making federal aid available for people in six New Jersey counties and five New York counties affected by the devastatin­g floods. He is open to applying the declaratio­n to other storm-ravaged New Jersey counties, White House spokespers­on Jen Psaki said.

NEW ORLEANS — Hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses in Louisiana, most of them outside New Orleans, still didn’t have power Tuesday and more than half of the gas stations in two major cities were without fuel nine days after Hurricane Ida slammed into the state.

There were also persistent signs of recovery, however, as the total number of people without electricit­y has fallen from more than a million at its peak, while hundreds of thousands of people have had their water restored. AT&T, which suffered widespread cellphone outages after the storm, reported that its wireless network now is operating normally in Louisiana.

As residents struggled to recover, state organizati­ons, church groups and volunteers labored for a ninth day to hand out food, water and other supplies to those left without resources when their homes were destroyed or left uninhabita­ble.

Warner Thomas, president and CEO of the state’s largest hospital system — Ochsner Health — warned that it would be “some time” before hospitals in Terrebonne and Lafourche parish fully reopen. Emergency rooms at the two hospitals, however, were open.

Kim Bass said the Louisiana heat was the hardest thing to cope with without power at her home in St. John the Baptist Parish. She said she and her husband were using a generator to keep food refrigerat­ed but had no air conditioni­ng. Water service was intermitte­nt.

“So you may have water one minute, then you may not have water for the next two days,” she said.

Fuel shortages also persisted across hard-hit areas of the state. More than 50 percent of gas stations in New Orleans and Baton Rouge remained without gasoline Tuesday morning, according to GasBuddy.com.

The power situation has improved greatly since Ida first hit. In the first hours after the storm, nearly 1.1 million customers were in the dark — including all of New Orleans. With the help of workers from power companies in numerous states, the state’s biggest energy provider, Entergy, has been able to slowly bring electricit­y back, leaving only 19 percent of its customers in the region without power as of Tuesday.

Ida’s death toll in Louisiana rose to 15 people Tuesday. The storm’s remnants also brought historic flooding, record rains and tornados from Virginia to Massachuse­tts, killing at least 50 more people.

Seven nursing home residents in Louisiana died after being evacuated during Hurricane Ida to a warehouse in the town of Independen­ce where conditions were later determined to be unhealthy and unsafe, according to state health officials who said they’ve launched an investigat­ion into the facility.

 ?? Evan Vucci / Associated Press ?? President Joe Biden speaks as he tours a neighborho­od impacted by flooding from the remnants of Hurricane Ida on Tuesday in the Queens borough of New York.
Evan Vucci / Associated Press President Joe Biden speaks as he tours a neighborho­od impacted by flooding from the remnants of Hurricane Ida on Tuesday in the Queens borough of New York.

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