Showing posts with label Hurricane Irene. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hurricane Irene. Show all posts

Monday, August 29, 2011

Manhattan's Great Escape: New York City spared the worst of Irene, with flood water already receding and winds calming

By Paul Bentley and Oliver Tree


Manhattan appears to have escaped the worst of Hurricane Irene, with deserted city streets already drying off from amounts of rain and wind far less extreme than expected.

After hundreds of thousands fled in anxious anticipation this weekend, Irene arrived last night as more of a heavy thunder storm than a devastating hurricane.

In the city, projected winds of 75mph hit at closer to 40mph and while streets in lower Manhattan briefly flooded, the water has already receded.

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What's news? A man canoes to try get a newspaper in Soho on West Broadway in lower Manhattan

Barely overflowing: The rivers broke their banks but New York is spared the worst of Irene

What hurricane? Revellers enjoy the downpour in Manhattan last night

Playing: Revellers play in the puddles during Hurricane Irene in New York's Times Square last night


As rain swept the streets this morning, Manhattan was turned into a ghost town. By mid-morning, the city itself was, however, largely unaffected by the huge problems faced elsewhere.

About 200,000 New Yorkers have been left without power, but they are mainly residents on Staten Island, Queens and the outer suburbs.

Experts had warned that a storm surge on the fringes of Lower Manhattan could send seawater into the maze of underground vaults that hold the city's cables and pipes, knocking out power to thousands and crippling Wall Street, Ground Zero and the luxury high-rise apartments of Battery Park City. Tornadoes were thought to have been a possibility but the warning is now limited to areas in Brooklyn and Queens.

With both the East and Hudson Rivers breaking their banks, power could be cut to thousands in the city if flooding reaches dangerous levels.


Party time: Hockey players from Vancouver, British Columbia, play an impromptu hockey game at Times Square

Wet: The hockey players went out in the rain despite warnings to stay indoors

Resourceful: These two joggers in Central Park, New York, use a fallen tree to stretch before their work out


Such a scenario is, though, most likely to pose a serious threat to the Rockaways, Coney Island and South Beach.

The storm finally arrived last night after days of preparation and anxious anticipation.

Home owners boarded up windows, filled bath tubs with emergency water and went panic shopping for days worth of food and drink, expecting the very worst from Irene.

In an unprecedented move, Mayor Michael Bloomberg ordered the mandatory evacuation of hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers, including the infirm at five New York hospitals most at risk from the hurricane.

Brave: A cyclist looks on as water from New York Harbor washes over a sidewalk in Battery Park today

Splash: A car drives into a flooded area of lower Manhattan as Hurricane Irene closed in on the New York City today


Battered: Water from New York Harbor washes over a sidewalk in Battery Park this morning


The massive operation was carried out over the course of 12 hours on Friday and involved moving intensive care patients and premature babies in their incubators.

Only ten patients were kept at New York University Hospital as their conditions were so critical, to move them was considered more dangerous.

This morning, however, New Yorkers woke up to scenes far less serious than projected.

Both the Hudson and East Rivers overflowed but water had already started receding by 10am. A flood surge had been expected to reach 8ft, but just 1ft washed onto the streets.

Running: Gary Atlas, of Brighton Beach, N.Y., jogs along a pier at Coney Island in New York

Wading: Captain Jon Jedlicka, right, and John Murray check storm damage along a dock as it is battered by the storm surge and winds from Hurricane Irene in Montauk, New York

And what's the umbrella for? A woman braves deep flood water in Soho, Manhattan

Just having a chat: Locals shoot the breeze while ankle deep in flood water in New York City


Not going anywhere fast: A man tried to ride his bicycle through flood water in lower Manhattan this morning


In Lower Manhattan, where residents were warned to stay indoors and shops had shut up in panic, a few puddles and heavy rainfall did not stop people taking out there dogs for early morning walks.

In total, the city had received 176 reports of downed trees or branches across the five boroughs.

By mid-morning, the rain had completely stopped, leaving a sense of eerie calm over the abandoned city.

Residents took to social networking sites to express their sense of relief and anti-climax.

Mike Ruddick wrote: 'Is Irene the biggest hurricane that never was #ireneoverreaction.'

Stuart Millar, who had spent money panic shopping, added: 'For sale: 10 gallons of spring water, batteries (all sizes) and 200 candles (as new). Best offer accepted #irene.'

Sarah Wright 45, a dancing teacher from England said: ‘Obviously being in Manhattan I was scared, but I knew we were out of the danger zone.

‘My flight has been cancelled and now I have to stay until Wednesday.

‘I was worried when I saw people panic buying in the shops but, some store owners stayed open despite the rain.

‘I do feel for the people that have lost their homes in the flooding.’

Jim Lehan, in his mid 60’s , said: ‘What storm! We spent the night at our house on Elizabeth Street.

‘We filled up the bath tub with water, we also went shopping on Friday which we normally don’t do.

‘What they do in New York is they over react, they really do so this is not a surprise.

His wife Jill added: ‘They shut down the subway, he [Bloomberg] wanted to cover his bases.

‘You have to warn people, it was huge. We haven’t had one like that for a long time.’

Wisconsin-based Stephanie Ely , 31, told MailOnline: ‘If I was a tourist I would be very bummed right now – everything is closed and there isn’t much to do.’
‘Saying that, I am glad they made such a big deal about it though.’


Camille Mathieux, 19, from Brussles said: ‘It is not that big, all the news stations made it into such a big event.

‘The hotel we were staying in told us to stay in our rooms all day, and we bought some extra food to stock up just in case.

‘People were taping up their windows of their shops and in the end this was unnecessary.

'‘It was definitely hyped.’

Felled: Five trees were knocked over by high winds from Hurricane Irene in front of the East River Cooperative Village apartment buildings along Grand Avenue in New York

Some damage: People wade through the water on a flooded section of 12th Avenue in New York today

Underwater: Rainwater is seen collected beneath machinery at the World Trade Center today


While New York City escaped the worst, Irene has already battered the East Coast, claiming 12 lives so far, ripping trees from the ground and leaving millions without power.

An 11-year-old boy in Virginia was killed when a tree fell through the roof of his house and a child died in a car crash at an intersection in North Carolina where traffic lights were out.

More than three million people from South Carolina to Maryland were without power as the giant 580-mile-wide storm brought widespread flooding and high winds that knocked down power lines.

Almost half a million homes were without power in New Jersey with utilities companies saying it could take days to restore service.

A nuclear reactor shut down in Maryland after a transformer was reportedly damaged by flying debris. Constellation Energy Nuclear Group described it as a low-level emergency and said the plant remained stable. Communications director Mark Sullivan said here was no threat to employees or residents.

Clear up: People use buckets to remove water from a flooded Chelsea Apartment in New York

Community spirit: People pitch in to help clear the flooded apartment in Chelsea, Manhattan


Meanwhile, flood waters forced a storm shelter to be evacuated in Hoboken, which lies across the Hudson River from Manhattan.

All subway service has been suspended because of the threat of flooding in the tunnels - the first time in history the nation's biggest transit system has shut down because of a natural disaster. Sandbags and tarps were placed on or around subway grates.

Authorities shut down the Port of New York and the Port for Long Island Sound. The Palisades Interstate Parkway entrance to the George Washington Bridge was also closed due to the worst weather conditions to threaten the city since the 1980s.

In his final address on Saturday night at 10.30pm, Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced a tornado warning for New York and said that the time for evacuation was over. He advised people to stay indoors and make preparations.

Mayor Bloomberg warned New York's eight million residents that a storm surge in the city at 8am could lead to widespread blackouts.

He said: 'The edge of the hurricane has finally got upon us. No matter how tempting it is to say ''I was outside during the storm'' ... stay inside. We'd like to get through this with as minimal damage to human beings as possible, and after that property, but it's human lives we are really worried about.'

So far 11 people have died from hurricane Irene. A man in Onslow County, North Carolina suffered a heart attack and died while boarding up his windows, according to the Charlotte Observer. A man in Nash County was killed outside his house after he was struck by a tree limb picked up by the strong winds.

Sheriff Dick Jenkins told WRAL.com that the man, who was not identified, went to feed his animals outside his Nashville, North Carolina home, when a tree or branch fell on him.

In Florida, a surfer was killed when he was knocked off his board at New Smyrna Beach, where surfers had flocked to take advantage of 10-foot waves.

'It appears he went over a wave and might have gone head first into the ground,' Tammy Marris, a spokeswoman for the Volusia County Beach Patrol, told the Daytona Beach News-Journal.

Two additional people died in car accidents in North Carolina on Saturday night as a result of the hurricane. Another man died in Chesterfield County, Virginia, after a tree fell on his home.

In Queenstown, Maryland, a woman died after a tree knocked a chimney through the roof of her home, crushing her.

The Mayor warned New Yorkers that Irene was a life-threatening storm and urged them to stay indoors to avoid flying debris, flooding or the risk of being electrocuted by downed power lines.

'It is dangerous out there,' he said, but added: 'New York is the greatest city in the world and we will weather this storm.'


Words of warning: A pedestrian takes a risk as roads are closed and barricades raised in Lower Manhattan with Hurricane Irene expected to bear down on the city today

Slim pickings: A shopper makes the most of the cereals on offer as milk and bread supplies ran out in New York stores

Eye of the storm: A NASA photo taken from the International Space Station shows the size of hurricane Irene

Huge: Hurricane Irene is due to affect some 20 per cent of the U.S. population as the giant tropical storm moved along the East Coast


Times Square, often called the crossroads of the world, was almost deserted as shops boarded up windows and put sandbags outside entrances.

'We just came to see how few people are in Times Square and then we're going back,' said Cheryl Gibson, who was on holiday in the city.

Construction work came to a standstill and workers at the World Trade Centre site dismantled a crane and secured equipment. Mayor Bloomberg said there would be no effect on the opening of the September 11 Memorial to mark the 10th anniversary of the terrorist attacks.

Power company Con Edison brought in hundreds of extra utility workers from around the country. While Lower Manhattan is protected by a seawall and a network of pumps, Con Ed vice president John Mucci said they stood ready to turn off the power to about 6,500 customers in the event of severe flooding. Mr Mucci said it could take up to three days to restore the power if the cables became drenched in saltwater.

A spokesman for the New York Stock Exchange said it was prepared for the worst with its own backup generators.

Some 370,000 city residents were ordered to leave their homes in low-lying areas in the boroughs of Brooklyn, Queens and Manhattan. However many were unwilling to evacuate. Nicholas Vigliotti, 24, an auditor who lives in a high-rise building along the Brooklyn waterfront, said he saw no point.

'Even if there was a flood, I live on the fifth floor,' he said.

Hours earlier, the normally bustling streets had emptied out and the rumble of the subways came to a stop.

Many residents seemed to be taking it in their stride, staying off the streets but planning hurricane get-togethers and hot tub parties.

'We already have the wine and beer, and now we're getting the vodka,' said Martin Murphy, a video artist who was shopping at a liquor store near Central Park with his girlfriend. 'If it lasts, we have dozens of movies ready, and we'll play charades and we're going to make cards that say, "We survived Irene''.

Unbelievable sight: Two men push a cart through a normally bustling Grand Central Terminal


Completely soaked: A Hasidic Jew makes his way home as heavy rain falls in Brooklyn, New York, late Saturday night


Yesterday New York governor Andrew Cuomo doubled the number of National Guard soldiers deployed to New York City to 1,900.

The troops, who have been mobilised from across the state, will assist with traffic control on bridges and tunnels, sandbagging operations at the World Trade Center site, evacuation shelter operations in New York, the construction of barriers for railway yards and train tunnels, and other hurricane emergency efforts.

The city opened more than 90 evacuation shelters with room for about 70,000 people.

But by early evening, only about 5,500 had checked in, officials said. At one shelter set up in a high school in the Park Slope section of Brooklyn, residents arrived carrying bags filled with clothing and pushing carts loaded with their belongings.

Many had been evacuated from a housing project in Brooklyn's Red Hook area. Tenants said management had forced them to leave by telling them the water and power would be shut off at 5 pm.

'For us, it's him,' said Victor Valderrama, pointing to his three-year-old son. 'I didn't want to take a chance with my son.'

Con Ed shut down ten miles of steam pipes underneath the city to prevent explosions if they came in contact with cold water. The shutdown affected 50 commercial and residential customers around the city who use the pipes for heat, hot water and air conditioning.

Irene came ashore in North Carolina on Saturday morning, slightly weakened but still powerful, and was expected to roll up the densely populated Interstate 95 corridor.

More than 8.3 million people live in New York City, and nearly 29 million in the metropolitan area.

A hurricane warning was issued for the city Friday afternoon, the first since Gloria in September 1985. That storm blew ashore on Long Island with winds of 85 mph and caused millions of dollars in damage, along with one death in New York.

The area's three major airports - LaGuardia, Kennedy and Newark Liberty - closed at noon to arriving flights. Departing flights were to be shut down by 10pm. Subway trains began grinding to a halt at noon.

The transit system won't reopen until at least Monday, after pumps remove water from flooded stations. The subways routinely flood during even ordinary storms and have to be pumped out.

Watch the videos









source: dailymail

Sunday, August 28, 2011

New York feels the force of Irene as the city is reduced to a ghost town and hours of torrential rain fuel fears of severe flooding

By MIKE O'BRIEN and LOUISE BOYLE

Deserted: People wait for a cab at Times Square in New York as rains fall before Hurricane Irene hits

Hurricane Irene battered New York in the early hours of Sunday morning as heavy rain caused fears of severe flooding and reduced the city to a ghost town.

Around 200,000 New Yorkers were now without power, according to local news stations, most of them on Staten Island, Queens and the outer suburbs.


Words of warning: A pedestrian takes a risk as roads are closed and barricades raised in Lower Manhattan with Hurricane Irene expected to bear down on the city today


Forecasters said a storm surge on the fringes of Lower Manhattan could send seawater into the maze of underground vaults that hold the city's cables and pipes, knocking out power to thousands and crippling Wall Street, Ground Zero and the luxury high-rise apartments of Battery Park City. Tornadoes were also a possibility.


Splish splash: A taxi speeds by on 42nd Street at Times Square in New York as rains fall before Hurricane Irene hits


The destructive power of Hurricane Irene has so far killed ten people, including two children. An 11-year-old boy in Virginia was killed when a tree fell through the roof of his house and a child died in a car crash at an intersection in North Carolina where traffic lights were out.

More than two million people from South Carolina to Maryland were without power as the giant 580-mile-wide storm brought widespread flooding and high winds that knocked down power lines.


Slim pickings: A shopper makes the most of the cereals on offer as milk and bread supplies ran out in New York stores


Nearly half a million homes were without power in New Jersey with utilities companies saying it could take days to restore service. New York, New Jersey and Long Island were on heightened alert for tornadoes. The Passaic River in New Jersey was at risk of bursting its banks if heavy rainfall continues.


No way home: Travellers sleep at Penn Station, New York as trains were cancelled due to hurricane warnings all along the American East Coast


A nuclear reactor shut down in Maryland after a transformer was reportedly damaged by flying debris. Constellation Energy Nuclear Group described it as a low-level emergency and said the plant remained stable. Communications director Mark Sullivan said here was no threat to employees or residents.

City officials warned that if Irene stayed on track, it could bring gusts of 85 mph overnight that could shatter skyscraper windows.


Unbelievable sight: Two men push a cart through a normally bustling Grand Central Terminal


Flood waters forced a storm shelter to be evacuated in Hoboken which lies across the Hudson River from Manhattan.

'Hoboken faces the worst case scenario. Flooding has begun. Moving Wallace Shelter residents to state shelter in east Rutherford,' Mayor Dawn Zimmer wrote on Twitter.

All subway service was suspended because of the threat of flooding in the tunnels - the first time the nation's biggest transit system has shut down because of a natural disaster. Sandbags and tarps were placed on or around subway grates.


Completely soaked: A Hasidic Jew makes his way home as heavy rain falls in Brooklyn, New York, late Saturday night


Authorities shut down the Port of New York and the Port for Long Island Sound. The Palisades Interstate Parkway entrance to the George Washington Bridge was also closed due to the worst weather conditions to threaten the city since the 1980s.

In his final address on Saturday night at 10.30pm, Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced a tornado warning for New York and said that the time for evacuation was over. He advised people to stay indoors and make preparations.


Warning: Despite the hurricane being downgraded to a Category 1 storm, it is still expected to have locally extreme impacts


Mayor Bloomberg warned New York's eight million residents that a storm surge in the city at 8am could lead to widespread blackouts.

He said: 'The edge of the hurricane has finally got upon us. No matter how tempting it is to say ''I was outside during the storm'' ... stay inside. We'd like to get through this with as minimal damage to human beings as possible, and after that property, but it's human lives we are really worried about.'


Late night grocery run: A man braves torrential rain to get some supplies in Brooklyn on Saturday night


The Mayor warned New Yorkers that Irene was a life-threatening storm and urged them to stay indoors to avoid flying debris, flooding or the risk of being electrocuted by downed power lines.

'It is dangerous out there,' he said, but added: 'New York is the greatest city in the world and we will weather this storm.'


No snarl ups here: The normally crowded entrance to the Holland Tunnel in Manhattan


Times Square, often called the crossroads of the world, was almost deserted as shops boarded up windows and put sandbags outside entrances.

'We just came to see how few people are in Times Square and then we're going back,' said Cheryl Gibson, who was on holiday in the city.

Construction work came to a standstill and workers at the World Trade Centre site dismantled a crane and secured equipment. Mayor Bloomberg said there would be no effect on the opening of the September 11 Memorial to mark the 10th anniversary of the terrorist attacks.


Streets of fear: The entrance to the Midtown Tunnel West Bound


Power company Con Edison brought in hundreds of extra utility workers from around the country. While Lower Manhattan is protected by a seawall and a network of pumps, Con Ed vice president John Mucci said they stood ready to turn off the power to about 6,500 customers in the event of severe flooding. Mr Mucci said it could take up to three days to restore the power if the cables became drenched in saltwater.

A spokesman for the New York Stock Exchange said it was prepared for the worst with its own backup generators.

Some 370,000 city residents were ordered to leave their homes in low-lying areas in the boroughs of Brooklyn, Queens and Manhattan. However many were unwilling to evacuate. Nicholas Vigliotti, 24, an auditor who lives in a high-rise building along the Brooklyn waterfront, said he saw no point.


Lights are on but no one's there: A spooky view inside the Midtown Tunnel West Bound


'Even if there was a flood, I live on the fifth floor,' he said.

Hours earlier, the normally bustling streets had emptied out and the rumble of the subways came to a stop.

Many residents seemed to be taking it in their stride, staying off the streets but planning hurricane get-togethers and hot tub parties.


The lone runner: A man heads north on the Hudson River Greenway ahead of the arrival of Irene in Lower Manhattan


'We already have the wine and beer, and now we're getting the vodka,' said Martin Murphy, a video artist who was shopping at a liquor store near Central Park with his girlfriend. 'If it lasts, we have dozens of movies ready, and we'll play charades and we're going to make cards that say, "We survived Irene''.

A hurricane warning was issued for the city Friday afternoon, the first since Gloria in September 1985. That storm blew ashore on Long Island with winds of 85 mph and caused millions of dollars in damage, along with one death in New York.


Getting out of the rain: New York National Guard officers run towards the Sixty-Ninth Regiment Armory where they are staying


The area's three major airports - LaGuardia, Kennedy and Newark Liberty - closed at noon to arriving flights. Departing flights were to be shut down by 10pm. Subway trains began grinding to a halt at noon.

The transit system won't reopen until at least Monday, after pumps remove water from flooded stations. The subways routinely flood during even ordinary storms and have to be pumped out.


A sitting target awaits: The skyscrapers of New York underneath stormy skies on Saturday evening as the rains come ahead of the winds


Boilers and elevators were shut down in public housing in evacuation areas to encourage tenants to leave and to prevent people from getting stuck in elevators if the power went out.

Some hotels were shutting off their elevators and air conditioners. Others had generators ready to go.


Pedestrians walk past sandbags used to control possible floods at downtown Manhattan


Dozens of buses arrived at the Brooklyn Cyclones minor league ballpark in Coney Island to help residents get out. Nursing homes and hospitals were emptied.

At a shelter set up at a high school in the Long Island town of Brentwood, Alexander Ho calmly ate a sandwich in the cafeteria. Ho left his first-floor apartment in East Islip, even though it is several blocks from the water, just outside the mandatory evacuation zone.

"Objects outside can be projected as missiles," he said. "I figured my apartment didn't seem as safe as I thought, as every room has a window."


Eerie avenues: A lone man walks past a boarded up Flatiron Building, left, while pedestrains walk across a virtually traffic-free Fifth Avenue


No go area: In the city that never sleeps, The Times Square subway station is spookily silent


An MTA worker locks a gate at the subway at Grand Central Station


Shutting down: Ticket agents remove the stanchions which form the ticketing lines at JFK International Airport


We're waiting: A volunteer puts up a sign in a shelter centre at Newcomers High School in Queens


Covered up: A woman and her son walk through Times Square


source :dailymail

Hurricane Irene leaves flooding and destruction it its wake as nine die and millions without power while storm churns up East Coast

-Five deaths reported in North Carolina and three in Virginia, including an 11-year-old child
-Surfer dies in Florida after trying to take advantage of high waves
-Residents told to stay indoors as flooding hits North Carolina, Virginia and Maryland
-More than two million people without power as Hurricane Irene pummels North Carolina and Virginia
-Conditions ripe for tornadoes in New York City, warns National Weather Service, as twisters reported touching down in Delaware and Maryland
-Experts say biggest danger are storm surges of up to 11ft that could hit New York City
-Entire public transport system as well as five main New York City airports on lockdown
-Downgraded to category 1 storm as hurricane made landfall near Cape Lookout
-President declares federal emergency for New York state and warns U.S. is experiencing 'historic hurricane'
-New York governor Andrew Cuomo sends 1,900 National Guard soldiers to New York City

By Daily Mail Reporter


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Flooding: Two men use a boat to explore a street flooded by Hurricane Irene in Monteo, North Carolina


The destructive power of Hurricane Irene was revealed tonight as at least nine people, including two children, were dead as the storm lashed North Carolina and Virginia as it charged up the East Coast toward New York.

More than two million people from South Carolina to Maryland were without power as the giant 580-mile-wide storm brought widespread flooding and high winds that knocked down power lines.

Irene's strength was downgraded to a category 1 hurricane, but as it approached New York, forcasters warned it would hit the city at or near hurricane strength.

The National Weather Service said conditions are ripe for tornadoes in the city, Long Island and southern Connecticut, as twisters were reported touching down in Delaware and Maryland.

Washed away: The Albemarle Sound floods vehicles outside a Dairy Queen shortly after Hurricane Irene barreled through the Outer Banks in Nags Head, North Carolina

Storm: Forecasters at the National Hurricane Center rate Irene a category 1 storm with winds in excess of 85 mph (137 kph)

Jarod Wilton looks at the flood waters rising to his doorstep, in Alliance, North Carolina


Around two million people were without power in Virginia as Irene battered the region, reported state governor Bob McDonnell..

Progress Energy, North and South Carolina's utility service, said about 250,000 customers had lost electricity there.

Widespread flooding was caused by Irene pushing a giant storm surge, a wall of water, out of its way as it marched up the Atlantic Coast.

In many places, forecasters warned, the storm surge could be as destructive as the hurricane itself, flooding low-lying areas before the storm even arrives with its winds and pelting rain.

Daniel Brown, the warning coordination meteorologist for NOAA's National Hurricane Centre, said: 'Storm surge will raise water levels by as much as 4 to 8 feet above ground level within the hurricane warning area from the North Carolina/Virginia border northward to Cape Cod.'

He added: 'Near the coast, the surge will be accompanied by large, destructive, and life-threatening waves.'

Five deaths have been reported in North Carolina and three in Virginia. One man died in Florida.

The first was a man in Onslow County, North Carolina, who suffered a heart attack and died while boarding up his windows, according to the Charlotte Observer. A man in Nash County was killed outside his house after he was struck by a tree limb picked up by the strong winds.

In Pitt County, an individual was killed in a vehicle crash. Details on that death were not immediately available.

Sheriff Dick Jenkins told WRAL.com that the man, who was not identified, went to feed his animals outside his Nashville, North Carolina home, when a tree or branch fell on him.

And in Newport News, Virginia, an 11-year-old boy who had gone missing from his family's apartment was found dead after a tree fell on him, WAVY reported.

Destruction: The hurricane force winds of Irene rip the siding off of homes on Nags Head, North Carolina

Heeling: One of two people rescued from a sailboat, right, uses a line to make their way onto the beach on Willoughby Spit in Norfolk today

Sprawling: Hurricane Irene opened its assault on the Eastern Seaboard on Saturday by lashing the North Carolina coast with wind as strong as 115 mph and pounding shoreline homes with waves

Tragedy: A young boy was killed after a large tree fell onto his apartment in Newport News, Virginia. He was pronounced dead at the scene

Maze of destruction: A vehicle avoids a downed utility pole on Woodlawn St as Hurricane Irene hits Greenville, North Carolina today


In Florida, a surfer was killed when he was knocked off his board at New Smyrna Beach, where surfers had flocked to take advantage of 10-foot waves.

'It appears he went over a wave and might have gone head first into the ground,' Tammy Marris, a spokeswoman for the Volusia County Beach Patrol, told the Daytona Beach News-Journal.

Two additional people died in car accidents in North Carolina on Saturday night as a result of the hurricane. Another man died in Chesterfield County, Virginia, after a tree fell on his home.

Tornadoes were reported touching down in Delaware and Maryland. In Lewes, Delaware, governor Jack Markell said at least 17 homes had been damaged by a twister.

The National Weather Service reported a tornado touching down in Nassau Station, Delaware, and Maryland State Police said there was an apparent tornado on the lower Eastern Shore of the state.

Damaging winds and torrential rain have led to an unprecedented lockdown as the storm roars its way northwards toward New York, where it is expected to hit on Sunday morning, according to the National Hurricane Centre.

New York City became like a ghost town as three hundred seventy thousand people were ordered to evacuate their homes and businesses as experts warned Irene could wreak havoc when it hits the Big Apple because of storm surges pushing seawater ashore and heavy rainfall causing flooding.

The nation's largest subway system and arriving flights at the five main New York City-area airports were halted at noon on Saturday as Hurricane Irene spun its way up the Eastern Seaboard, threatening 20 per cent of the U.S. population.

On Saturday night, mayor Michael Bloomberg said: 'The time for evacuation is over. Everyone should go inside and stay inside.'

President Obama visited the headquarters of the Federal Emergency Management Agency today to check on preparations and response activity.

Full force winds: A row of beachfront houses, some condemned before the arrival of Hurricane Irene, get lashed by wind, rain, and the rising Atlantic Ocean

Danger: Homes that sit on the sand of North Carolina's beaches are in danger of collapse as strong waves from Hurricane Irene strike the coast

Under water: Waves lap at the foundation of a house along Calico Creek today in Morehead City, North Carolina

Rising: High water floods the waterfront of the downtown area as Hurricane Irene comes ashore near Morehead City, North Carolina

Running from the storm: A pedestrian crosses an open area as Hurricane Irene passes through Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina this morning

Destruction: Wayne Lanier, proprietor of the Atlantic Food Mart, carries ice into his store next to a gas canopy that was knocked over from the winds by Hurricane Irene in Surf City, North Carolina today


Mr Obama arrived at FEMA's National Response Coordination Center, where federal agencies convene during disasters. He toured the facility and participated in a video teleconference with state and federal officials. He also listened as reports came in from as far as Vermont, where rivers are expected to flood and Canadian utility crews have been called in to help.

'You guys are doing a great job,' the president told more employees working to coordinate federal, state and local emergency responders. 'This is obviously going to be touch and go.... It's going to be a long 72 hours,' Mr Obama said.

The President had been due to leave Martha's Vineyard today after a nine-day vacation, but he cut it short and returned to the White House last night to get ahead of the storm. He brought first lady Michelle Obama and their daughters, Malia and Sasha, with him.

His visit followed a conference call he convened from the White House with Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano and FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate to review federal emergency response and recovery plans.

Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said today: 'If you receive a warning to evacuate, please do so. Please stay inside, hunker down until the storm passes. We anticipate rain potential flooding and significant power outages.'

New York governor Andrew Cuomo doubled the number of National Guard soldiers deployed to New York City to 1,900.

The troops, who have been mobilised from across the state, will assist with traffic control on bridges and tunnels, sandbagging operations at the World Trade Center site, evacuation shelter operations in New York, the construction of barriers for railway yards and train tunnels, and other hurricane emergency efforts.

The hurricane reportedly spawned several tornadoes in North Carolina and a tornado watch was issued in Virginia as is ripped through the coastline. The massive storm is expected to strike New Jersey resort towns on Sunday morning before moving up to New York.

But while the Big Apple has shut down its public transportation system, Washington, D.C. officials are planning for the metro transit to operate as normal, Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority officials said.

Spokesman Steve Taudenkidel said the only change they made to D.C.’s metro rail system was a revision of the schedule for Sunday, when it will open at its previously-scheduled 7am, rather than the earlier time of 5am due to the postponement of the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial dedication.

The decision to shut down the New York City transit system, however, has faced millions of carless residents from the Bronx's most distant reaches down through Manhattan and out to the beaches of Brooklyn and Queens with the question of where to go and how to get there.

Bridges and tunnels also could be closed as the storm approaches, possibly clogging traffic in an already congested city. Taxis in New York City were to switch from metered fares to zone fares, meaning riders would be charged by which part of the city they were being driven to, rather than how far they were being taken.

But by Saturday morning, many New Yorkers appeared to have heeded the warnings about the approaching storm. Bridges and streets were nearly empty, with few people walking or driving. With the shutdown deadline looming, most subway cars on a train on the number 1 line that runs the length of Manhattan's West Side were empty already in the early morning.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg urged those who needed to leave to do so right away on Saturday morning. The city doesn't have enough resources to evacuate everyone after the weather worsens, he said about two-and-a-half hours before the transit system was to shut down.

'Staying behind is dangerous, staying behind is foolish, and it's against the law, and we urge everyone in the evacuation zones not to wait until gale-force winds,' he said in a news conference from Coney Island as rain began to fall. 'The time to leave is right now.'

Transit fares and tolls were waived in evacuated areas. Officials hoped most residents would stay with family and friends, and for the rest the city opened nearly 100 shelters with a capacity of 71,000 people.

Despite reports to the contrary, Bloomberg insists no one has been turned away from a shelter. About 14,000 residents were in emergency shelters at press time.

Officials are strongly urging citizens to evacuate now. Taxis are mandated to take New Yorkers from flood zones to safer areas.

On Wall Street, sandbags were placed around subway grates nearest the East River, which is expected to surge as the hurricane nears New York.

The five main New York City-area airports were scheduled to close at noon Saturday for arriving domestic and international flights. Three of them, Kennedy, LaGuardia and Newark Liberty, are among the nation's busiest.

At Kennedy airport Friday night, travellers rushed to make some of the last flights leaving before the hurricane was expected to hit. Some terminal entrances were already closed ahead of Saturday's shutdown. Passengers waiting in line for security checks were led between terminals on ramps closed to vehicles as security agents tried to get the passengers through on time.

US Airlines alone has cancelled at least 6,100 flights through Monday, grounding hundreds of thousands of passengers as the storm could strike major airports from Washington to Boston.

Briefing: President Barack Obama (2nd R) listens as FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate (R) updates representatives from various U.S. safety agencies, including U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano (3rdR) on Hurricane Irene

Urgency: Charlene Tyler picks up sandbags in a cart during a sandbag distribution to Washington, DC residents

Helping hand: Workers load sandbags into vehicles during a sandbag distribution to Washington, DC residents in advance of the arrival of Hurricane Irene near R.F.K. Stadium today

'Leave now': Residents of the Wavecrest Home for Adults wait to board buses to be evacuated from the Far Rockaway section of New York City today in anticipation of Hurricane Irene

Shut down: A New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority employee tells people that there will be no more subway out of Coney Island, an area under mandatory evacuation ahead of Hurricane Irene, in New York today

Taking cover: Charles Foster of Long Neck, Delaware, relaxes with a book as he joins over 275 other people who checked into the Red Cross center at Indian River High School to ride out Hurricane Irene in Dagsboro


Irene made landfall as a category 1 storm near Cape Lookout, North Carolina on Friday night, and began to roll up the Interstate 95 corridor reaching New York on Sunday. A hurricane warning was issued for the city Friday afternoon, the first time that's happened since Gloria in 1985.

If the storm stays on its current path, skyscraper windows could shatter, tree limbs would fall and debris would be tossed around. Streets in the southern tip of the city could be under a few feet of water, and police readied rescue boats but said they wouldn't go out if conditions were poor.

Bloomberg said he was confident people would get out of the storm's way.

'We do not have the manpower to go door-to-door and drag people out of their homes,' he said. 'Nobody's going to get fined. Nobody's going to go to jail. But if you don't follow this, people might die.'

Nevertheless, he said that for those who don't heed the warnings, police officers would use loudspeakers on patrol vehicles to spread the word about the evacuation.

Several New York landmarks were under the evacuation order, including the Battery Park City area, where tourists catch ferries to the Statue of Liberty. Construction was stopping throughout the city, and workers at the World Trade Center site were dismantling a crane and securing equipment. Bloomberg said there would be no effect on the September 11 memorial opening the day after the 10th anniversary of the terrorist attacks.

Landfall: Shortly after the Category 1 storm made landfall near Cape Lookout, North Carolina, forecasters said Irene's winds had dropped to 85mph

Satellite: This NOAA image taken today at 7:45 AM EDT shows category 1 Hurricane Irene has made landfall over eastern North Carolina

But sporting events, concerts and even Broadway were going dark.

New flood gates were put in place outside Citi Field as a precaution, but Major League Baseball took no chances. The Braves-Mets games Saturday and Sunday were postponed, to be made up as a doubleheader on September 8.

All Broadway musicals and plays were cancelled for Saturday and Sunday, as well as Zarkana by Cirque du Soleil at Radio City Music Hall and Lincoln Center Theater's War Horse. It's the first time Broadway has shut down for an emergency since the blackout in 2003.

Bloomberg weathered criticism after a December 26 storm dumped nearly two feet of snow that seemed to catch officials by surprise. Subway trains, buses and ambulances got stuck in the snow, some for hours, and streets were impassable for days. Bloomberg ultimately called it an 'inadequate and unacceptable' response.

This time officials weren't taking any chances. Transit officials said they can't run once sustained winds reach 39mph, and they need eight hours to move trains and equipment to safety.

The subway system won't reopen until at least Monday, after pumps remove water from flooded stations. Even on a dry day, about 200 pump rooms remove 13 million to 15 million gallons of water that seep into the tunnels deep underground.

About 1.6million people live in Manhattan, and about 6.8 million live in the city's other four boroughs.

For those with cars, parking was available at the city's evacuation centres. From there, each family will be assigned to a shelter and taken there by bus.

In the Queens community of the Rockaways, more than 111,000 people live on a barrier peninsula connected to the city by two bridges and to Long Island to the west.

Everyone there was ordered to evacuate, which brought the total in the city to 370,000, city officials said.

The city's public transit system carries about 5million passengers on an average weekday, and the entire system has never before been halted because of a natural disaster. It was seriously hobbled by an August 2007 rainstorm that disabled or delayed every one of the city's subway lines. And it was shut down after the 9/11 attacks and during a 2005 strike.

In the past 200 years, New York has seen only a few significant hurricanes. In September 1821, a hurricane raised tides by 13 feet in an hour and flooded the southernmost tip of Manhattan in an area that now includes Wall Street and the World Trade Center memorial. In 1938, a storm dubbed the Long Island Express came ashore about 75 miles east of the city on neighbouring Long Island and then hit New England, killing 700 people and leaving 63,000 homeless.

And in 1944, Midtown was flooded, where Times Square, Broadway theatres and the Empire State Building are located.

More than 2million people across the Eastern Seaboard have been told to move to safer places, with hurricane warnings from North Carolina in the South all the way to Massachusetts in the North.

Gasoline supplies are ample, although there were reports of several stations running dry. Analysts do not expect prices for power and gas to rise.

Hundreds of thousands of travellers will have vacation plans changed by Hurricane Irene. If weather forecasters are right, the storm could strike major airports from Washington to Boston, buffeting them with heavy rain and dangerous winds.

Obama drama: President Barack Obama, first lady Michelle and their daughters Sasha and Malia (left) arrive home at the White House last night after cutting their holiday short.

Gone baby gone: Paramedics and EMTs load an incubator holding a baby into an ambulance on Friday after NYU Langone Medical Center was ordered to evacuate about 400 patients

Emergency: A fleet of private ambulances prepare to move patients from Coney Island Hospital as low-lying evacuations take place.

Getting out of Dodge: Ralph Lauren, left, and Steven Spielberg, right, were both pictured on Friday boarding helicopters out of New York City


President Obama yesterday declared an emergency for New York state, which means the state can receive federal aid to supplement state and local emergency and clean-up assistance.

Sustained wind strength within the storm is 85mph, with the hurricane still expected to cause storm surges of up to five feet even if the wind speed drops to around 80mph over the weekend. That could cause flooding in Downtown Manhattan and the at-risk areas ordered to be evacuated by Governor Cuomuo.

The windows and doors of Broadway stores are being boarded up, with sandbags lining some entrances, as owners attempt to limit damage caused by storm surges which could be as high as 11 feet.

Residents were yesterday stocking up on equipment such as flashlights, batteries and bottled water in case the power outages that are predicted to affect millions materialise.

'The basic issue is, first, New York City has world-class emergency planners. But the city is out of practice when it comes to hurricanes,' homeland security expert Stephen Flynn, and author of 'The Edge of Disaster, told CNN.

'This isn't a mammoth storm in terms of lots of death and destruction, but what it is going to do is be very disruptive, and people have to be in position to camp out in their house.'

This massive, slow-moving hurricane is forecast to soak an already drenched Northeast and may come ashore at a time when tides are unusually high, making storm surge even worse – 4 to 11 feet with waves on top, forecasters say.

'Water is the No. 1 killer,' retired National Hurricane Center Director Max Mayfield said on Friday. 'That's going to cause the greatest loss of life.'

MIT meteorology professor Kerry Emanuel said the flooding from Irene could be worse than the 1938 New England hurricane that killed 564 people.

'I think everybody is confident, unfortunately, that this is going to be a bad event from freshwater flooding,' he said.

Forecasters predict Irene will dump six to 10 inches of rain in a swath from North Carolina to New England with some areas getting as much as 15 inches of rain. That's partly because the storm is unusually large and is moving fairly slowly - around 15 mph - allowing it to dump more rain over large areas.

Barriers: Pedestrians walk past sandbags laid down at downtown Manhattan, which will be used to control possible floods

Full defence: Sandbags are used to surround a basement entrance as New Yorkers brace themselves for Irene.

A pedestrian passes next to sandbags used to control possible floods at downtown Manhattan


The predictions gave credence to fear that millions of East Coast residents are in danger of losing electricity, some for days. Utility officials said that power outages would come as strong winds and heavy rains threaten utility wires and poles.

Progress Energy, North Carolina's utility service, said at least 200,000 customers were without power as Irene pummelled the region.

President Barack Obama addressed the nation yesterday, urging Americans to 'take the storm seriously' and warning it is set to be 'a historic hurricane'.

'You need to listen to your state and local officials,' he said. 'If you're in the way of this hurricane you should be preparing now. If you're instructed to evacuate please do so.'

He said disaster response agencies have millions of litres of water, millions of meals and tens of thousands of cots and blankets - and the Red Cross has begun preparing shelters in North Carolina.

'The more you can do to be prepared now, the quicker we can focus our resources after the storm on those who need them the most,' Mr Obama added.

'One of my greatest nightmares was having a major hurricane go up the whole Northeast Coast,' said Max Mayfield, ex-chief of the National Hurricane Center. 'This is going to have an impact on the United States economy.'

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source: dailymail

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