Storm Barrels Through Region, Leaving Destructive Path
New York Times - 30 October 2012
The mammoth and merciless storm made landfall near Atlantic City around 8
p.m., with maximum sustained winds of about 80 miles per hour, the
National Hurricane Center said. That was shortly after the center had
reclassified the storm as a post-tropical cyclone, a scientific renaming
that had no bearing on the powerful winds, driving rains and
life-threatening storm surge expected to accompany its push onto land.
The storm had unexpectedly picked up speed as it roared over the
Atlantic Ocean on a slate-gray day and went on to paralyze life for
millions of people in more than a half-dozen states, with extensive
evacuations that turned shorefront neighborhoods into ghost towns. Even
the superintendent of the Statue of Liberty left to ride out the storm
at his mother’s house in New Jersey; he said the statue itself was “high
and dry,” but his house in the shadow of the torch was not.
The wind-driven rain lashed sea walls and protective barriers in places
like Atlantic City, where the Boardwalk was damaged as water forced its
way inland. Foam was spitting, and the sand gave in to the waves along
the beach at Sandy Hook, N.J., at the entrance to New York Harbor. Water
was thigh-high on the streets in Sea Bright, N.J., a three-mile
sand-sliver of a town where the ocean joined the Shrewsbury River.
“It’s the worst I’ve seen,” said David Arnold, watching the storm from
his longtime home in Long Branch, N.J. “The ocean is in the road, there
are trees down everywhere. I’ve never seen it this bad.”
In New York, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s office said late Monday night that
at least five deaths in the state were attributable to the storm. At
least three of those involved falling trees. About 7 p.m., a tree fell
on a house in Queens, killing a 30-year-old man, the city police said.
About the same time, two boys, ages 11 and 13, were killed in North
Salem in Westchester County, when a tree fell on the house they were in,
according to the State Police.
In Morris County, N.J., a man and a woman were killed when a tree fell
on their car Monday evening, The Associated Press reported.
In Manhattan, NYU Langone Medical Center’s backup power system failed
Monday evening, forcing the evacuation of patients to other facilities.
In a Queens beach community, nearly 200 firefighters were battling a
huge blaze early on Tuesday morning that tore through more than 50
tightly-packed homes in an area where heavy flooding slowed responders.
Earlier, a construction crane atop one of the tallest buildings in the
city came loose and dangled 80 stories over West 57th Street, across the
street from Carnegie Hall.
Soon power was going out and water was rushing in. Waves topped the sea
wall in the financial district in Manhattan, sending cars floating
downstream. West Street, along the western edge of Lower Manhattan,
looked like a river. The Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel, known officially as
the Hugh L. Carey Tunnel in memory of a former governor, flooded “from
end to end,” the Metropolitan Transportation Authority said, hours after
Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of New York ordered it closed to traffic.Officials
said water also seeped into seven subway tunnels under the East River.
Joseph J. Lhota, the transit authority chairman, called the storm the
most devastating disaster in the 108-year history of the subway system.
“We could be fishing out our windows tomorrow,” said Garnett Wilcher, a
barber who lives in the Hammells Houses, a block from the ocean in the
Rockaways in Queens. Still, he said he felt safe at home. Pointing to
neighboring apartment houses in the city-run housing project, he said,
“We got these buildings for jetties.”
Hurricane-force winds extended up to 175 miles from the center of the
storm; tropical-storm-force winds spread out 485 miles from the center.
Forecasters said tropical-storm-force winds could stretch all the way
north to Canada and all the way west to the Great Lakes. Snow was
expected in some states.
Multimedia
Businesses and schools were closed; roads, bridges and tunnels were
closed; and more than 13,000 airline flights were canceled. Even the
Erie Canal was shut down.
Subways were shut down from Boston to Washington, as were Amtrak and the
commuter rail lines. About 1,000 flights were canceled at each of the
three major airports in the New York City area. Philadelphia
International Airport had 1,200 canceled flights, according to
FlightAware, a data provider in Houston. And late Monday night, Mayor
Michael R. Bloomberg said cabs had been instructed to get off New York
City roads.
A replica of the H.M.S. Bounty, a tall ship built for the 1962 movie
“Mutiny on the Bounty” starring Marlon Brando and used in the recent
“Pirates of the Caribbean” series, sank off the North Carolina coast.
The Coast Guard said the 180-foot three-masted ship went down near the
Outer Banks after being battered by 18-foot-high seas and thrashed by
40-m.p.h. winds. The body of one crew member, Claudene Christian, 42,
was recovered. Another crew member remained missing.
Delaware banned cars and trucks from state roadways for other than “essential personnel.”
“The most important thing right now is for people to use common sense,”
Gov. Jack Markell said. “We didn’t want people out on the road going to
work and not being able to get home again.”
By early evening, the storm knocked out power to hundreds of thousands
of homes, stores and office buildings. Consolidated Edison said that as
of 1:30 a.m. Tuesday, 634,000 customers in New York City and Westchester
County were without power. Con Edison, fearing damage to its electrical
equipment, shut down power pre-emptively in sections of Lower Manhattan
on Monday evening, and then, at 8:30 p.m., an unplanned failure,
probably caused by flooding in substations, knocked out power to most of
Manhattan below Midtown, about 250,000 customers. Later, an explosion
at a Con Ed substation on East 14th Street knocked out power to another
250,000 customers.
In New Jersey, more than two million customers were without power as of
1:30 a.m. Tuesday, and in Connecticut nearly 500,000.
President Obama, who returned to the White House and met with top
advisers, said Monday that the storm would disrupt the rhythms of daily
life in the states it hit. “Transportation is going to be tied up for a
long time,” he said, adding that besides flooding, there would probably
be widespread power failures. He said utility companies had lined up
crews to begin making repairs. But he cautioned that it could be slow
going.
“The fact is, a lot of these emergency crews are not going to get into
position to start restoring power until some of these winds die down,”
the president said. He added, “That may take several days.”
Forecasters attributed the power of the storm to a convergence of
weather systems. As the hurricane swirled north in the Atlantic and then
pivoted toward land, a wintry storm was heading toward it from the
west, and cold air was blowing south from the Arctic. The hurricane left
more than 60 people dead in the Caribbean before it began crawling
toward the Northeast.
“The days ahead are going to be very difficult, Gov. Martin O’Malley of
Maryland said. “There will be people who die and are killed in this
storm,” he said.
Alex Sosnowski, a senior meteorologist with AccuWeather, said
potentially damaging winds would continue on Tuesday from Illinois to
the Carolinas — and as far north as Maine — as the storm barreled toward
the eastern Great Lakes.
Mr. Cuomo, who ordered many of the most heavily used bridges and tunnels
in New York City closed, warned that the surge from Hurricane Sandy
could go two feet higher than that associated with Tropical Storm Irene
last year. The PATH system, buses and the Staten Island Ferry system
were also suspended.
Mr. Lhota, the chairman of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority,
has said he expected to restore at least some service about 12 hours
after the storm ended. But possible flooding within the subway system
could prevent a full-scale reopening.
The storm headed toward land with weather that was episodic: a strong
gust of wind one minute, then mist. More wind. Thin sheets of rain
dancing down the street. Then, for a moment, nothing. The sky lightened.
Then another blast of rain. Then more wind.
The day brought a giddiness to schoolchildren who had the day off and to
grown-ups who were fascinated by the rough, rising water. Some went
surfing, discounting the danger. Felquin Piedra, 38, rode his Jet Ski
from Queens to Lower Manhattan.
“I love the waves,” Mr. Piedra yelled from New York Harbor. “The water is warm. I’ve jumped in several times.”
But even when landfall was still hours away, there was no holding back
the advance guard of the storm — fast-moving bands of rain and punishing
winds.
It added up to devastation. Driving through places like Pompton Plains,
N.J., late Monday afternoon was like an X-Games contest for drivers.
They had to do tree-limb slaloms on side streets and gunned their
engines anxiously as they passed wind funnels of leaves swirling on
highways.
On City Island, off the Bronx mainland, Cheryl Brinker sprayed “Sandy
Stay Away” on her boarded-up art studio, expanding a collage she started
during Tropical Storm Irene last year. But by midafternoon, nearby
Ditmars Street was under as much as five feet of water and Steve Van
Wickler said the water had cracked the cement in his cellar. “It’s like a
little river running in my basement,” he said. “There are cracks and
leaks everywhere.”
In some places, caravans of power-company trucks traveled largely empty
roads; Public Service Electric and Gas said that 600 line workers and
526 tree workers had arrived from across the country, but could not
start the repairs and cleanup until the wind had subsided, perhaps not
until Wednesday.
They will see a landscape that, in many places, was remade by the storm.
In Montauk, at the end of Long Island, a 50-seat restaurant broke in
half. Half of the building floated away and broke into pieces on the
beach.
The 110-foot-tall lighthouse at Montauk Point — the oldest in the state,
opened in 1796 — shuddered in the storm despite walls that are six feet
thick at the base. The lighthouse keeper, Marge Winski, said she had
never felt anything like that in 26 years on the job.
“I went up in tower and it was vibrating, it was shaking,” she said. “I
got out of it real quick. I’ve been here through hurricanes, and
nor’easters, but nothing this bad.”
Labels: Environment, Human Relations, Nature, United States
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