Remnants of Hurricane Ida smash into Northeast leaving at least ten people dead
At least ten people have been killed in the Northeast, including a two-year-old boy who drowned in a New York City basement apartment after the tail-end of Hurricane Ida crept up on the tri-state area on Wednesday night bringing a monthâs worth of rain in a period, flooding homes while people slept and tearing up parts of New Jersey with tornadoes.
Eight people were killed in New York City as waters rushed into basement apartments, uprooted cars and sent them slamming into buildings in Brooklyn and Queens. In Passaic, New Jersey, a man in his seventies died in his car after it became submerged. A 19-year-old man died in Maryland when the Rock Creek River burst its banks and flooded nearby homes.
The two-year-old in New York City was found dead alongside a 48-year-old woman and 50-year-old man in an apartment in Woodside, Queens. They had all become trapped in their basement apartment. They were among the eight dead in New York City, which also includes an 86-year-old woman who died in her basement apartment in Elmhurst, Queens.
New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio declared a state of emergency on Wednesday night as a result of what he called a âhistoric weather eventâ, after New Jersey governor Phil Murphy and New York governor Kathy Hochul had issued the same warning in their respective states earlier in the day.
More people have now been found dead in New York City from Ida than in Louisiana, which had days to prepare for the storm. The first warnings came at around 7pm and by 10pm, the NYPD was recovering dead bodies from basement homes.
The National Weather Serviceâs office in New York issued a Flash Flood Emergency for New York City for the first time ever â" warning people to seek high ground immediately. The âEmergencyâ warning is the highest level of flood alert â" indicating immediate and significant threats to life and property.
âThis particular warning for NYC is the second time weâve ever issued a Flash Flood Emergency. (Itâs the first one for NYC). The first time weâve issued a Flash Flood Emergency was for Northeast New Jersey an hour ago,â the agency tweeted.
Across New York and New Jersey, there are now 85,000 people without power, including 25,000 in New York City.
All New York City subway lines were suspended on Wednesday night and non-emergency vehicles were banned until 5am Thursday. The MTA is now running an extremely limited subway lines.
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MANHATTAN, NEW YORK CITY: A cascade of water is seen pouring into a New York City train station at 28th Street station in Kipâs Bay, a neighborhood in downtown Manhattan. A flash flood emergency was declared in New York City for the first time ever on Wednesday as Ida slammed the northeast after wreaking havoc in southern states for days
NEW YORK CITY: Trains were seen being swamped with cascades of water, while subway stations were completely flooded
QUEENS, NEW YORK CITY: Members of the FDNY are pictured in waist-high water as they rescue a woman from her car
BURLINGTON, NEW JERSEY: A tornado is seen at the Burlington Bristol Bridge near the state border with Pennsylvania
NEW JERSEY: A tornado was seen touching down in New Jersey in video posted to Twitter on Wednesday
QUEENS, NEW YORK CITY: The inside of an MTA bus was submerged as a driver ploughed through 3-4 feet of rain
The National Weather Serviceâs office in New York issued a Flash Flood Emergency for New York City for the first time ever
Basement apartments all over New York City, New Jersey and Pennsylvania flooded on Wednesday when the storm hit
IDA CLAIMS 9 LIVES AFTER CREEPING UP ON NORTHEASTNew York City
A two-year-old boy, 48-year-old woman and 50-year-old man drowned in their basement apartment in Woodside, Queens
A 48-year-old woman was found dead in her apartment in Forest Hills, Queens
A 43-year-old mother and her 22-year-old son died in Jamaica, Queens, in their home after cars that were uprooted by water slammed into the building, causing a partial collapse
Man, 66, who was found dead in his apartment in Cypress Hills, Brooklyn
Woman, 86, who drowned in her basement apartment in Elmhurst, Queens
Maryland
A 19-year-old man was found dead after his basement apartment flooded near the Rock Creek river
New Jersey
A man in his seventies was pulled from his car in Passaic, New Jersey. He died while trying to drive to safety
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The city suspended the subway and banned all non-emergency vehicles from the roads until 5am, after 3.15 inches of rain were recorded at Central Park in just one hour.
New Yorkâs flash flood emergency warning now means more than 60 million people throughout the northeast are under flash flood watches while Ida continues to devastate the area. At 2am on Thursday morning, 112,000 were without power in Pennsylvania; 51,000 in New York; 82,000 in New Jersey; and 36,000 in Connecticut.
âThese numbers are climbing. Charge your devices and if you experience an outage â" call it in immediately,â Murphy tweeted.
Having tracked up the east coast of the United States leaving a trail of devastation in her wake, Ida is now whipping towards the city of Boston.
The storm moved east in the evening, with the National Weather Service confirming at least one tornado and social media posts showing homes blown to rubble and roofs torn from buildings in a southern New Jersey county just outside Philadelphia.
Newark Airport reported four inches of rain in a two hour period, as the baggage area of the airport flooded.
The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which operates the airport, said in a statement that all flights were suspended and all parking lots were closed due to severe flooding.
Videos from the airportâs baggage room showed water spraying up like a geyser while workers stood in the flood waters.
New Jersey also suspended some of its NJ Transit train lines and buses.
âWeâre enduring an historic weather event tonight with record breaking rain across the city, brutal flooding and dangerous conditions on our roads,â NYC mayor Bill de Blasio tweeted.
âPlease stay off the streets tonight and let our first responders and emergency services get their work done. If youâre thinking of going outside, donât. Stay off the subways. Stay off the roads. Donât drive into these heavy waters. Stay inside.â
The NYC Office of Emergency Management (OEM) issued a travel ban around 12:50 am preventing all non-emergency vehicles from travelling on city streets and highways until 5am.
Earlier, OEM had closed access to the Bronx Whitestone Bridge for some types of vehicles. The bridge is a major access point between the New York City boroughs of Queens and the Bronx, and commuting between Long Island and New England.
Firefighters are shown rescuing a man from floodwater, right, on Wednesday night at the Bronx Expressway
A person walks in floodwaters in Philadelphia, Thursday, Sept. 2, 2021 in the aftermath of downpours and high winds from the remnants of Hurricane Ida that hit the area
Vehicles are under water during flooding in Philadelphia, Thursday, Sept. 2, 2021 in the aftermath of downpours and high winds from the remnants of Hurricane Ida
Shown is flooding in the Manayunk section of Philadelphia, Thursday, Sept. 2, 2021 in the aftermath of downpours and high winds from the remnants of Hurricane Ida that hit the area
Ida will likely be a tropical rainstorm by the time it reaches the Northeast on Wednesday. Even after it moves off the New England coast later Thursday, residents across the Northeast may still feel the stormâs wrath in the days that follow. Many major metropolitan areas, including Boston, New York City, Philadelphia and Washington, D.C. are under flash flood watch
LAMBERTVILLE, NEW JERSEY: Cars are seen nearly completely submerged as the storm hit the northeast on Wednesday night
QUEENS, NEW YORK CITY: A homeless man stands in the doorway of a deli during flash flooding caused by storm Ida
QUEENS, NEW YORK: Cars attempt to navigate their way through flooded streets
BAYONNE CITY, NEW JERSEY: Cars sit sunken on Highway 440 after a flash flood
FLUSHING, NEW YORK: A golf cart drives through flood water outside Louis Armstrong Stadium on day three of the U.S. Open
BROOKLYN, NEW YORK CITY: A basement floods during the aftermath of Ida as it dumps two inches of rain in the area
BRONX, NEW YORK CITY: A street in the Bronx floods as tropical depression Ida dumps two inches of rain in the area
BROOKLYN, NEW YORK CITY: A street in the Bushwick neighborhood is pictured completely flooded on Wednesday
QUEENS, NEW YORK CITY: People stand at a subway entrance as they debate to wade through several inches of water caused flash flooding after remnants of storm Ida brought three inches of rain per hour across the city
QUEENS, NEW YORK CITY: People stand inside a subway station as water runs past their feet during flash flooding caused by storm Ida
BROOKLYN, NEW YORK CITY: Flooding is seen in the Crown Heights neighborhood at the corner Franklin and Eastern Parkway
BROOKLYN, NEW YORK CITY: The water could be seen flowing like a river as a rain poured onto the Crown Heights neighborhood
Queens Boulevard in the neighborhoods of Maspeth and Corona was described as âa literal riverâ and shocking video shows water flooding a Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) bus while multiple cars were stuck in the water.
âHero bus driver managed to get us safely through the 3-4 feet of rain coursing down the boulevard, but only seemed to be getting worse,â tweeted Joe English, who works in the press office for UNICEF.
âFinally made it through to higher ground and a fellow passenger exclaims âoh no I missed my stopâ.â
The MTA noted on its website that nearly all train lines have been suspended, except for the 7 train and the Staten Island Railway â" which have been delayed.
âTrain service may be extremely limited tonight because of heavy rainfall and flooding across the region. We strongly recommend you avoid traveling at this time, if you can,â the agency said.
The agency tweeted: âIf youâre on a train thatâs stuck, stay on that train; the safest place to be is on the train unless you hear otherwise from the conductor.â
Emergency crews were working to evacuate passengers from a stuck E train at 74 Street and Broadway/Roosevelt Avenue, according to the @NYCFireWire account on Twitter.
NEW YORK CITY: The National Weather Service shared a video of a white SUV floating through flowing water in the Big Apple
NEW YORK CITY: The National Weather Service noted that cars appeared to be floating in the shocking videos
MANHATTAN, NEW YORK CITY: People are seen walking at Times Square as Ida brought mass flooding and damage
MANHATTAN, NEW YORK CITY: People are seen walking at Times Square as Ida brought dumped rain on the Big Apple
MANHATTAN, NEW YORK CITY: A woman sits on a chair in Times Square as heavy rain hit the city
MANHATTAN, NEW YORK CITY: A food delivery driver rides on a motorized bike as he works during the storm
The National Weather Service shared a video of a white SUV floating through flowing water in the Big Apple while warning residents: âThis is perfect example of what you should not do!â
âNotice the white car towards the end that is floating. This water is too deep to drive through. Turn Around Donât Drown!!â the agency tweeted.
Play was also suspended between Diego Schwartzman and Kevin Anderson at Louis Armstrong Stadium during the U.S. Open â" despite the venue have a roof â" because of wind and rain. Itâs nasty out there, Los Angeles Times sports columnist Helene Elliot tweeted.
One video posted to social media purported to show a New York City street rat enjoying a swim in the floodwaters â" while another video allegedly showed a man using pool floaties during the storm.
In another video, an apparent GrubHub driver was seen trekking on a bike through flowing flood waters to make a delivery â" receiving praise from people on Twitter. Photos also showed other delivery drivers around the city working despite the storm.
Parts of northern Nassau County on Long Island were also under tornado warnings, as the National Weather Service advised there could also be hail from thunderstorms.
As the storm continued into Connecticut, flash flooding could be seen on Elm Street in West Haven while several cars seem to be have trouble on the roads, WVIT reporter Matt Austin tweeted. He wrote that West Haven police had put cones to block roads but flowing flood waters could be seen taking the cones away.
In Stamford, a video posted to Twitter shows firefighters and bystanders appearing to try to push a car against uphill against flowing water as other cars line up behind them.
BRIDGEVILLE, PENNSYLVANIA: Water floods a street amid downpours and high winds from the remnants of Hurricane Ida
Tornados were reported in New Jersey, leaving properties destroyed
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND Buildings were destroyed after the city was hit my strong winds
Earlier in the day, Pennsylvania was blanketed with rain after high water drove some from their homes in Maryland and Virginia.
Thousands of people were evacuated Wednesday after water reached dangerous levels at a dam near Johnstown, a Pennsylvania town nicknamed Flood City.
The Cherry City Volunteer Fire Company tweeted that it had rescued 41 passengers from a school bus stuck in flood waters near Pittsburgh, while 10 students were saved from another school bus in western Maryland.
A tornado was also believed to have touched down along the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland.
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.
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.
The Cherry City Volunteer Fire Company tweeted that it had rescued 41 passengers from a school bus stuck in flood waters near Pittsburgh
Another view of the Pennsylvania school bus shows it in flooded waters as people were rescued by emergency crews
The Frederick County Sheriffâs Office said that 10 students and a driver were rescued off a flooded school bus in western Maryland
BRIDGEVILLE, PENNSYLVANIA: Clean up from flooding on Baldwin street continues after downpours and high winds from the remnants of Hurricane Ida hit the area Wednesday
BRIDGEVILLE, PENNSYLVANIA: Emergency crews are seen cleaning up after flooding on Baldwin Street
OAKDALE, PENNSYLVANIA: Water is pumped from the basement of a business on Noblestown road during clean up from flooding after downpours and high winds from the remnants of Hurricane Ida
Cambria County emergency management director and 911 center head Art Martynuska said the water level at the Wilmore dam reached a height that required evacuation.
A 911 dispatcher in Mantua Township, N.J., told The Weather Channel that people were trapped in their basements and that roofs flew off of homes while there were reports of some severe injuries.
There were also reports of multiple buildings with roofs ripped off, damaged trees and debris blocking roads in the north of Philadelphia. Homes were also damaged in Chester County.
Nearby Hinckston Run Dam was also being monitored but appeared stable by late afternoon, he said, by which time water levels at Wilmore dam were receding.
The storm â" now a tropical depression â" is moving into the northeast, where two to three inches of rain are expected every hour Wednesday evening
BRIDGEVILLE, PENNSYLVANIA: A car is stranded on a flooded street on Wednesday as emergency crews stand in the background
WILKES-BARRE, PENNSYLVANIA: Garbage and debris clogs under the St. Maryâs Road bridge causing water to exceed its banks
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND: Debris is strewn along West Street as crews work to clean up the mess
Bristol, Virginia: A truck is seen in flood waters nearly rising to the bed of the pickup in Virginia on Monday
âIf that trend continues weâll be allowing folks to return back to their residences shortly, hopefully by this evening,â Martynuska said.
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 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.
Northern Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania and eastern West Virginia were expected to see the highest impacts from the stormâs remnants â" which has already caused extensive flooding in parts of Louisiana and Mississippi and billions of dollars of damage.
Flash flooding knocked about 20 homes off their foundations and washed several trailers away in Virginiaâs 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.
Source: dailymail
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