In New York, “state of emergency” Declared due to flooding of Storm Ida
In New York, “state of emergency” Declared due to flooding of Storm Ida
The relics of the Storm caused huge floods in the national capital, which left Brooklyn and Queens seriously damaged, Governor Kathy Hochul of NY declared a state of emergency.
Heavy rain and flash floods in the New Yorks were inundated early Thursday by a devastating Storm Ida that had forced flight cancellation and state of emergency statements in the Northeast of the United States.
Ida slammed in the South Louisiana state during the weekend and blazed a trail to the north with severe flooding and tornadoes.
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The relics of the Storm caused huge floods in the national capital, which left Brooklyn and Queens seriously damaged, Governor Kathy Hochul of NY declared a state of emergency.
The Mayor Bill de blasio tweeted, “Tonight we have a historic weather event with record-breaking rained throughout the city, brutal flooding and dangerous road conditions.
The floods have shut down main roads across several districts including Manhattan, The Bronx and Queens, and hundreds of flights have been cancelled at nearby Newark, Lagardia and JFK airports.
Streets have become fluvial while subway stations in the city are also flooding, and service reportedly be effectively shut down by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.
As the film shows cars that are immersed on streets throughout town, authorities urge residents not to drive on overflowing roads.
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Tornado threat
Tornado watches are in place in southern Connecticut, north of New Jersey and south of New York. The NWS warned that tornadoes might end with torture.
The Philadelphia Metropolitan Area tweeted at the beginning of Wednesdays, together with a video of a car trapped in churning waters, is “Exceptionally dangerous and life-threatening flood in Somerset County as well as in other areas.”
Ida is expected to continue to boil north and bring heavy rains to New England on Thursday, which also experienced a rare tropical storm at the end of August.
US President Joe Biden is due to visit Louisiana on Friday and Ida has destroyed buildings and abandoned more than one million homes.