N.J. weather: Gov. Phil Murphy declares state of emergency due to widespread flooding, storm damage
Source: Newark Star Ledger
Gov. Phil Murphy declared a state of emergency Wednesday evening as fierce storms unleashed by the remnants of Hurricane Ida touched off multiple tornados and caused extensive flooding, damage and power outages.
Tropical Storm Ida is severely impacting all areas of our state, said Murphy in a statement. The safety of our residents is our main priority, and we urge everyone to be informed of local weather conditions and to stay off the roads.
The declaration issued just after 10 p.m. was effective immediately and applies to all 21 counties.
Multiple tornadoes were reported in Gloucester and Burlington counties on Wednesday evening as the storm pushed into the state along the Delaware River. In North Jersey, relentless rain that started as early as Wednesday morning pounded already saturated areas and caused numerous road closures and some evacuations.
Read more: https://www.nj.com/weather/2021/09/nj-weather-gov-phil-murphy-declares-state-of-emergency-due-to-widespread-flooding-storm-damage-from-ida-remnants.html
Full title: N.J. weather: Gov. Phil Murphy declares state of emergency due to widespread flooding, storm damage from Ida remnants

BigmanPigman
(52,972 posts)from Phila to Boston. Most rain in 100 years in some places. Ground is already saturated. This is very, very bad. Already 1 death and who knows how much damage will be seen.
Jrsygrl96
(245 posts)begin to describe how crazy it is here. Millburn, NJ streets looked like white water rapids. Major roadways - NJ Turnpike, Garden State Parkway, 287, 280 all closed in places. Tornado decimated houses in Mullica Hill, NJ. And rivers wont crest until Friday.
TexasTowelie
(120,623 posts)
Just north of you a few miles, Jrsygrl96.
We just had our basement waterproofed last year in June, one month before July '20, which saw the highest amount of rainfall ever in a month in NJ. Tonight I saw the wall spout little holes and water was trickling in. This despite drains that were also dug around the house. These drains were filled with large pipes that were filled with chipped rock. All pipes lead away from the house.
All that and I still hav a pump going in my basement tonight.
VWolf
(3,944 posts)I was on the road, trying to get home from Bergen County, around 9:30-10:00 last night. It felt apocalyptic. Would have been fun if it wasn't so scary.
Fortunately, I escaped any water damage.
This morning, I passed a slew of abandoned cars on my way to work. I could easily have been one of them.
Shanti Shanti Shanti
(12,047 posts)bucolic_frolic
(50,225 posts)Lots of data, too numerous to summarize. Site monitors storms, rivers, flooding and estimates. Really good if you can take the time to learn how to use it.
Larissa
(793 posts)Sorry for the extended copy and paste. (Pay wall that allows limited views.) It's apparent that this is the new normal with these storms: unpredictable, life-threatening danger. Not in a million years was New Jersey expecting a tornado which took out a number of homes in South West New Jersey. The deluge of water was Biblical, which killed some in their homes. As Hurricane Ida built up strength before landfall in Louisiana, the one report that the scientists emphasized was the record-breaking depth of the heated water in the Gulf of Mexico. That was gasoline that helped to fuel Hurricane Ida. Prepare accordingly for this new normal.
Hurricane Ida Aftermath: more killed in the Northeast than on the Gulf Coast
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-09-02/nyc-storm-delivers-deadly-lesson-about-new-weather-vulnerability
As Idas deadly waters receded Thursday from subway stations and roads, playgrounds and apartments, stunned residents of New York and New Jersey confronted their vulnerability as the old norms of weather no longer apply.
The remnants of a hurricane that first hammered distant New Orleans unleashed a torrent intense enough to kill at least 40 people across the Northeast, to paralyze the nations largest and wealthiest city, to halt its lifeblood transit system and conjure a future where residents and economy are constrained by recurrent disasters.
New York and its suburbs, which rebuilt power grids, subways and tunnels after 2012s Hurricane Sandy flooded lower Manhattan, were paralyzed again. Roads were closed, commuter rail was hobbled and hundreds of flights were canceled. But lasting damage to infrastructure appeared far less this time.
Only 170,000 homes and businesses remained without electricity by noon Thursday, according to PowerOutage.us. Airports were open, though at reduced capacity. Officials promised to have subways running at something like normal service by the evening.
But the storm and its death toll are grim reminders that as the climate changes, weather once considered freakish strikes with regularity, threatening the viability of all coastal economic centers.
The future threat we spoke about in dire terms, that future is now -- its happening, New York Governor Kathy Hochul said in a briefing Thursday. Were losing lives, were losing property and we cant continue down this path.
The summer has already brought deadly flooding in Tennessee and Germany, heat waves shattering all-time temperature records in western Canada, and wildfires raging in California and Greece.
Surprise Attack
Idas parting hit on New York and the Northeast likely pushed the storms overall economic losses and damages into the $50 billion to $60 billion range, said Chuck Watson, a disaster modeler with Enki Research. This would place it fifth on the list of the most costly hurricanes to hit the U.S., behind Katrina, Harvey, Maria, and Sandy.
Its path through the Northeast had been predicted for days, but its strength was a surprise. The storm collided with the jet stream at the hottest time of the day, when the air was already unstable, said Zack Taylor, a meteorologist with the U.S. Weather Prediction Center.
An area from eastern Pennsylvania to southern New England, including New York, got as much as 8 inches of rain in a few hours. In Central Park, 3.15 inches fell in one hour, setting a record, Taylor said.
It was the perfect set-up for extreme rainfall, and unfortunately, it happened over one of the most populous corridors of the United States, Taylor said.
Most residents didnt see it coming, sometimes with fatal consequences. On the Gulf Coast, Ida killed at least five people. In the Northeast, a weakened storm killed at least eight times that many.
New York Mayor Bill de Blasio early Thursday said the storm killed people who were alive at this exact moment yesterday, with no idea that such a horrible fate could befall them, he said. In the borough of Queens, three members of the same family died in their basement apartment. By evening, officials said the citys death toll had reached 13, while noting that the numbers were preliminary. Eleven fatalities were in Queens and two were in Brooklyn, NYPD Chief of Department Rodney Harrison said at a briefing late Thursday.
The departments Emergency Service Unit, which evacuated more than 800 people from the subway, also made 166 rescues in response to distress calls, Harrison said. While the unit constantly trains for disasters, this rainfall event was unprecedented, said Harry Wedin, chief of special operations, who oversees the ESU.
Preparing for these storms is something we take very seriously, Wedin said. These storms are getting worse and worse.
In Hillsborough Township, New Jersey, where many roads remained submerged, Governor Phil Murphy said the storm had claimed at least 23 lives across his state. Most died in vehicles, he said. Four people were found dead in an Elizabeth apartment complex. Residents said Thursday that the water rose rapidly. It was terrible, said Yvette Baker, 34. The water was so high. They had one rowboat trying to save all these people. People were screaming for help. Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, officials reported three deaths. In Connecticut, a state police sergeant was swept away by flood waters.
Thirteen miles outside Manhattan in Nutley, New Jersey, a town of about 28,000, a stretch of the business district became inundated as a tributary to the Passaic River overflowed its banks. Franklin Avenue, lined with Italian bakeries and pizzerias, doctor offices and a Dollar Tree, became a raging river, stranding motorists, sending debris crashing through the window of a vacant pork store and flooding businesses. Mark Vitiello, 51, showed up at his bakery at 3 a.m. to find an abandoned car in his entrance and about a foot of water in his kitchen. Ive been here my whole life and this is the worst Ive ever seen, said Vitiello, the third generation of his family to own the local landmark.
Some in low-lying areas fled their homes. Danny Calle, 40, and his 3-month-old daughter, Jolene, were rescued by emergency workers in an inflatable raft who came to their flooded Cranford, New Jersey, home about 10 a.m. Thursday. It happened so quick, said the U.S. Customs and Border Protection employee. Im grabbing diapers, grabbing formula, grabbing onesies. Im a new dad, so Im just grabbing everything.
Unequal Inundation
The storm flooded the basements of many businesses and homes in the Brooklyn neighborhoods of Bedford-Stuyvesant and Crown Heights, said Chi Ossé, a Democratic candidate for City Council. It is mostly black and brown folks or working-class folks who are dealing with the flooding right now, he said.
With homes and belongings soaked and few resources, they face a rough recovery, he said. Many of our residents who live in basements have flooded homes, he said. Their items are ruined. The Thursday morning commute brought idled trains and confusion. At Newark Liberty International Airport, workers cleaned up the flood damage in Terminal B. At Grand Central Terminal in Manhattan, all Metro-North Railroad trains were cancelled in both directions. Wanda Campbell of Brooklyn, was trying to get to White Plains. She had been waiting for a train for hours but said she might just head home.
At Penn Station, attorney Matthew Marino was trying to get to Staten Island for court, meaning he needed to catch a downtown subway to reach the ferry. I did not think the subways would be this bad, said Marino, 54, They have no idea what, when, or how service will be restored. Across the region, the storms battering created doubt and wonder about what would come next. Rachael Francique from East Flatbush in Brooklyn stopped at the edge of Prospect Parks Playground Three on Thursday morning to see it lying under three feet of water. This is New York City? she said to her 14-month-old. It looks like a lake. This does not look healthy at all.
With assistance by Max Abelson, Donna Borak, Henry Goldman, Emma Kinery, Brian K Sullivan, David Voreacos, Josh Saul, Nic Querolo, Shelly Banjo, and Elise Young