Hurricane Sandy bears down on Eastern Seaboard as millions brace for chaos
Reuters and Michael Erman and Caroline Humer, Canadian Press | Oct 28, 2012 10:43 PM ET | Last Updated: Oct 28, 2012 11:07 PM ET
REUTERS/Carlo Allegri New York Stock Exchange workers place sand bags in front of doors and over electrical vaults Sunday.
About 50 million people are in the path of the massive storm, which has already killed 66 people in the Caribbean and is expected to hit the U.S. Eastern Seaboard on Tuesday morning.
Meanwhile, Canadian Hurricane Centre said Sunday that in addition to rain and high winds, Sandy could also bring snow to parts of Ontario.
Spokesman Bob Robichaud said southern and eastern Ontario and western Quebec could see between 50 and 100 millimetres of rain late Monday and early Tuesday.
“Snow is another thing we’re going to have to consider with this thing, just because it’s drawing in some cold air from the north,” said Robichaud from Halifax during a media teleconference on Sunday.
While the storm does not pack the punch of Hurricane Katrina, which devastated New Orleans in 2005, forecasters said it could be the largest in size when it strikes land. At the moment, Sandy’s winds stretched some 830 km and churned up 3.6-metre seas spanning more than 1,600 km, meteorologists said.
New York and other cities and towns closed their transit systems and schools and ordered residents of low-lying areas to evacuate before a storm surge that could reach as high as 11 feet.
The New York Stock Exchange said it will close its trading floor on Monday for the first time since Hurricane Gloria in 1985, though stocks will still trade electronically. In addition, the United Nations, Broadway theaters, New Jersey casinos, schools up and down the Eastern Seaboard, and a myriad corporate events are all being shut by the storm.
Sandy also blew the presidential race off course, forcing President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney to cancel some campaign stops. It fuelled fears that the storm could disrupt early voting before the November 6 election.
Andrew Burton/Getty Images Cots
are seen at Seward Park High School, which is doubling as an evacuation
centre, in preparation for Hurricane Sandy Sunday in New York City.
“Don’t be stupid, get out, and go to higher, safer ground,” New Jersey Governor Chris Christie told a news conference.
Forecasters said Sandy was a rare, hybrid “super storm” created by an Arctic jet stream wrapping itself around a tropical storm, possibly causing up to 12 inches of rain in some areas, as well as up to 3 feet of snowfall in the Appalachian Mountains from West Virginia to Kentucky.
Worried residents in the hurricane’s path packed stores, searching for generators, flashlights, batteries, food and other supplies in anticipation of power outages. Nearly 284,000 residential properties valued at $88 billion are at risk for damage, risk analysts at CoreLogic said.
NOAA
Hurricane Sandy, pictured at 00:15 UTC, churns off the east coast Sunday.
“This is a serious and big storm,” Obama said after a briefing at the federal government’s storm response center in Washington. “We don’t yet know where it’s going to hit, where we’re going to see the biggest impacts.
The second-largest refinery on the East Coast, Phillips 66′s 238,000 barrel per day (bpd) Bayway plant in Linden, New Jersey, was shutting down and three other plants cut output as the storm affected operations at two-thirds of the region’s plants. Benchmark gasoline prices rose 1 percent in early futures trading.
REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz
Workers place barricades and sandbags at lower Manhattan Sunday.
“We’re expecting the worst, hoping for the best. We’re getting everything off the basement floor. We’ve got two sump pumps. But during Hurricane Floyd, we were down there for 17 hours straight sweeping water into the sump pumps,” said Maria Ogorek, a Maplewood, New Jersey, lawyer and mother of three.
New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg ordered the evacuation of some 375,000 people from low-lying areas of the city, from upscale parts of lower Manhattan to waterfront housing projects in the outer boroughs.
EVA HAMBACH/AFP/Getty Images D.C. Water employees fill bags with sand in downtown Washington Sunday.
Big banks in the world’s financial capital put key personnel in hotels overnight so that they could make it to work on Monday morning. Like the New York Stock Exchange, Nasdaq planned to open for electronic trading on Monday.
While Sandy’s 75 mph winds were not overwhelming for a hurricane, its exceptional size means the winds will last as long as two days, bringing down trees and damaging buildings. The slow-moving storm is expected to bring lashing rains in coastal areas and snow farther inland.
TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP/Getty Images MTA
Police watch over as the last people are cleared out of Grand Central
Station in New York Sunday as the MTA has been began an orderly
shutdown of commuter rail and subway service in preparation for
Hurricane Sandy.
As of 2:00 p.m. EDT/1800 GMT on Sunday, there were fewer than 5,000 customers without power in Delaware, the District of Columbia, Florida, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia, the U.S. Department of Energy said in a statement.
Even with all the warnings, some people tried to carry on with their plans.
“I just don’t buy into the hype,” said Kate Sullivan, a 40-year-old computer specialist from Alexandria, Virginia, who was headed to Baltimore-Washington International airport for a planned flight to Los Angeles. “I’m pretty sure I’m going to end up in LA by the end of the night.”
Labels: Canada, Environment, Nature, United States
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