- 2021-09-02 01:26:03
- LAST MODIFIED: 2024-11-17 11:11:19
Ida remnants pound Northeast with rain, flooding, tornadoes
Photo Collected:
International Desk:
Dhaka, Sept-02,
The remnants of Hurricane Ida blew through the
mid-Atlantic states Wednesday with at least two tornadoes, heavy winds and
drenching rains that collapsed the roof of a U.S. Postal Service building, left
cars and roads underwater and sent garbage floating through the streets of New
York.
Social media posts
showed homes reduced to rubble in a southern New Jersey county just outside
Philadelphia, not far from where the National Weather Service confirmed a
tornado Wednesday evening. Authorities did not have any immediate information
on injuries.
Other video showed
water rushing through Newark Liberty International Airport as the storm moved
into New York on Wednesday night.
The Port Authority of
New York and New Jersey, which operates the airport, tweeted at 10:30 p.m. that
all flights were suspended and all parking lots were closed due to severe
flooding. All train service to the airport also was suspended.
The National Weather
Service recorded 3.15 inches of rain in New York’s Central Park in one hour,
far surpassing the 1.94 inches that fell in one hour during Tropical Storm
Henri on the night of Aug. 21, which was believed at the time to be the most
ever recorded in the park.
New York’s FDR Drive, a
major artery on the east side of Manhattan, was underwater by late evening and
subway stations and tracks became so flooded that the Metropolitan
Transportation Authority suspended all service. Videos posted online showed
subway riders standing on seats in cars filled with water.
Other videos showed
vehicles submerged up to their windows on major roadways in and around the city
and garbage floating down a street in Queens.
At the U.S. Open tennis
tournament in Queens, television footage showed fans who had watched matches
under the Arthur Ashe Stadium’s retractable roof slogging through several
inches of water as they left.
Few parts of the region
were untouched, and residents huddled inside and endured the anxiety brought on
by tornado warnings that gradually moved north and east with the storm.
The roof collapsed at
the Postal Service building in Kearny, New Jersey, with people inside, police
Sgt. Chris Levchak said. Rescue crews were on scene into the night, with no
immediate word on the number of people or severity of injuries.
Gov. Phil Murphy
declared a state of emergency in all of New Jersey’s 21 counties, urging people
to stay off the flooded roads. Meteorologists warned that rivers likely won’t
crest for a few more days, raising the possibility of more widespread flooding.
Soaking rains prompted
the evacuations of thousands of people after water reached dangerous levels at
a dam near Johnstown, a Pennsylvania town nicknamed Flood City.
Ida caused countless
school and business closures in Pennsylvania. About 150 roadways maintained by
the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation were closed and many smaller
roadways also were impassable. Several thousand customers were still without
power late Wednesday night.
Some areas near
Johnstown, whose history includes several deadly floods, saw 5 inches or more
of rain by mid-afternoon, an inundation that triggered an evacuation order for
those downstream from the Wilmore dam. Nearby Hinckston Run Dam was also being
monitored but appeared stable by late afternoon.
Both dams were
considered high-hazard dams that are likely to kill someone were they to fail.
Evacuees were taken to
a nearby high school with help from the Red Cross, National Guard, local
transit authority and school transportation services, he said.
The 1889 Johnstown
flood killed 2,200 people, a disaster blamed on poor maintenance on the South
Fork Dam on the Little Conemaugh River. It sent a 36-foot wall of water roaring
into a populated area at 40 mph (65 kph).
High water drove some
from their homes in Maryland and Virginia. The storm killed a teenager, two
people were not accounted for and a tornado was believed to have touched down
along the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland.
The National Weather
Service had predicted flooding from what remained of Hurricane Ida, saying
steep terrain and even city streets were particularly vulnerable to a band of
severe weather that extended from the Appalachians into Massachusetts.
Flash flooding knocked
about 20 homes off their foundations and washed several trailers away in
Virginia’s mountainous western corner, where about 50 people were rescued and
hundreds were evacuated. News outlets reported that one person was unaccounted
for in the small mountain community of Hurley.
Water had almost reached
the ceilings of basement units when crews arrived at an apartment complex in
Rockville, Maryland, on Wednesday. A 19-year-old was found dead, another person
was missing and about 200 people from 60 apartments near Rock Creek were
displaced, Montgo mery County Fire Chief Scott Goldstein
said Wednesday.
“In many years I have
not seen circumstances like this,” Goldstein said.
Tropical Storm Larry
was strengthening and moving quickly westward after forming off the coast of
Africa earlier Wednesday. Forecasters predicted it would rapidly intensify in a
manner similar to Ida, becoming a major hurricane with top wind speeds of 120 mph
(193 kph) by Saturday. Kate remained a tropical depression and was expected to
weaken without threatening land.
End/Dct/Int/Sma/