New York and New Jersey face flood threats as storm brings outages, travel chaos
A winter storm that drenched the US Northeast with record rainfall has left thousands of people without power, grounded hundreds of flights and put New York and New Jersey on high alert for flooding from swollen rivers as another system approaches. “This was a far-reaching storm,” said Rob Carolan, owner of Hometown Forecast Services, which provides outlooks for Bloomberg Radio. “It was a potent, potent low” pressure system, he said. Forecasters are already bracing for another storm that is expected to hit Manhattan late Friday, bringing more rain to inundated rivers and streams and elevating risks of dangerous flooding through the region. That would come days after Manhattan’s Central Park received 1.73 inches (4.4 centimeters) of rain on Tuesday — a record for the date. The US Weather Prediction Center is calling for an additional 1 to 2 inches to fall from Arkansas to Atlantic Canada though the weekend. Even as rain from the latest storm tapers, flood warnings and watches remain in place from Maine to North Carolina. New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy, who declared an emergency Monday ahead of the storm, warned Wednesday that rising waters in the Passaic River is increasing the risk of additional flooding throughout the region. Other New Jersey waterways — Saddle River and Ramapo River — swelled overnight, while New York’s Bronx River rose to just below major flood stage by early Wednesday morning, the National Weather Service said. New rainfall records were also set at the region’s main airports — New York’s John F. Kennedy and LaGuardia, and Newark in New Jersey. The rain and winds played havoc with air travel across the region, grounding 652 flights as of early Wednesday with LaGuardia topping the list, according to airline tracking company FlightAware said.<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2024-01-11/general/new-york-and-new-jersey-face-flood-threats-as-storm-brings-outages-travel-chaos
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/logo.png
New York and New Jersey face flood threats as storm brings outages, travel chaos
A winter storm that drenched the US Northeast with record rainfall has left thousands of people without power, grounded hundreds of flights and put New York and New Jersey on high alert for flooding from swollen rivers as another system approaches. “This was a far-reaching storm,” said Rob Carolan, owner of Hometown Forecast Services, which provides outlooks for Bloomberg Radio. “It was a potent, potent low” pressure system, he said. Forecasters are already bracing for another storm that is expected to hit Manhattan late Friday, bringing more rain to inundated rivers and streams and elevating risks of dangerous flooding through the region. That would come days after Manhattan’s Central Park received 1.73 inches (4.4 centimeters) of rain on Tuesday — a record for the date. The US Weather Prediction Center is calling for an additional 1 to 2 inches to fall from Arkansas to Atlantic Canada though the weekend. Even as rain from the latest storm tapers, flood warnings and watches remain in place from Maine to North Carolina. New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy, who declared an emergency Monday ahead of the storm, warned Wednesday that rising waters in the Passaic River is increasing the risk of additional flooding throughout the region. Other New Jersey waterways — Saddle River and Ramapo River — swelled overnight, while New York’s Bronx River rose to just below major flood stage by early Wednesday morning, the National Weather Service said. New rainfall records were also set at the region’s main airports — New York’s John F. Kennedy and LaGuardia, and Newark in New Jersey. The rain and winds played havoc with air travel across the region, grounding 652 flights as of early Wednesday with LaGuardia topping the list, according to airline tracking company FlightAware said.<br/>