Superstorm Sandy: NYC neighbourhood burns to the ground, three New Jersey towns under water as death toll rises to 33
National Post Wire Services | Oct 30, 2012 10:27 AM ET | Last Updated: Oct 30, 2012 12:07 PM ET
More from National Post Wire Services
More from National Post Wire Services
AP Photo/Frank Franklin II
Damage caused by a fire at Breezy
Point is shown Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012, in in the New York City borough
of Queen. The fire destroyed between 80 and 100 houses Monday night in
the flooded neighborhood. More than 190 firefighters have contained the
six-alarm blaze fire in the Breezy Point section, but they are still
putting out some pockets of fire.
• Death toll rises to at least 33
• 80 to 100 houses burn to ground in NYC neighbourhood
• Three New Jersey towns flood when natural levee broken
• Blizzard hits West Virginia
• NYC’s subways face ‘worst disaster’ in 108 year history
• About eight million without power
• Power may not be restored for at least a week
• Tanker washes up on Staten Island
At least 33 people were killed in the United States by Sandy, one of the biggest storms to ever hit the country, which technically dropped just below hurricane status before making landfall on Monday night in New Jersey.
According to the Associated Press there were 17 victims in New York State, including 10 in New York City, and four dead in Pennsylvania and three in New Jersey. Sandy also killed 69 in the Caribbean and one in Toronto.
More than 1 million people in a dozen states were under orders to evacuate as the massive system plowed westward.
One disaster forecasting company predicted economic losses could ultimately reach $20 billion, only half insured.
AP Photo/Frank Franklin IIDamage
caused by a fire at Breezy Point is shown Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012,
in in
the New York City borough of Queen. The fire destroyed between 80 and
100 houses Monday
night in the flooded neighborhood. More than 190
firefighters have contained the six-alarm blaze fire
in the Breezy Point
section, but they are still putting out some pockets of fire.
Sandy, which was especially imposing because of its wide-ranging winds, brought a record storm surge of almost 14 feet to downtown Manhattan, well above the previous record of 10 feet during Hurricane Donna in 1960, the National Weather Service said.
Andrew Burton/Getty Images)Fire
fighters evaluate the scene of an apartment building which
had the
front wall collapse due to Hurricane Sandy on October 29, 2012 in New
York,
United States.
“Hitting at high tide, the strongest surge and the strongest winds all hit at the worst possible time,” said Jeffrey Tongue, a meteorologist for the weather service in Brookhaven, New York.
Hurricane-force winds as high as 90 miles per hour were recorded, he said.
“Hopefully it’s a once-in-a-lifetime storm,” Tongue said.
Large sections of New York City were without power, and transportation in the metropolitan area was at a standstill.
“In 108 years our employees have never faced a challenge like the one that confronts us now,” Metropolitan Transportation Authority Chairman Joseph Lhota said in a statement.
It could take anywhere from 14 hours to four days to get the water out of the flooded subway tunnels, the MTA said.
“The damage has been geographically very widespread” throughout the subway, bus and commuter train system, MTA spokesman Aaron Donovan said.
The towns of Moonachie, Little Ferry and Carlstadt were underwater after the swollen Hackensack River broke its banks, affecting around 2,000 residents, said Jeanne Baratta, chief of the Bergen County Executive.
Baratta, who was on the scene with emergency personnel, said there was the possibility that the river overflowed its banks rather than broke a levee while a New Jersey State Police spokesman described it as a levee break in the borough of Moonachie.
REUTERS/NY/NJ Port Authority/Twitter Floodwaters
from Hurricane Sandy rush into the Port
Authority Trans-Hudson's (PATH)
Hoboken, New Jersey station through an elevator shaft in this
video
frame grab from the NY/NJ Port Authority Twitter feed October 29, 2012.
“They are wet and they are cold and they have lost their homes and their property. It is very sad,” Baratta said.
“We are in rescue mode,” she said, adding that the three towns had been “devastated” by the flood waters.
Baratta described a scene of rescue teams using boats and trucks to move residents to safety at a nearby school in Teterboro, which also is home to a regional airport heavily used by corporate jets and smaller aircraft.
The break came hours after Sandy, which dropped below hurricane status just before it hit the U.S. East Coast on Monday.
The neighborhood, Breezy Point in the borough of Queens, had been extensively flooded by Sandy’s record storm surge, and firefighters were hampered in their efforts to bring the blaze under control, a spokesman for the New York Fire Department said.
No casualties were immediately reported and the cause of the fire was under investigation.
A tweet from the FDNY’s official Twitter feed said 50 or more homes were destroyed in the fire. The fire still was not under control by 5 a.m., the department said.
Local television showed firefighters wading through waist-deep water to get to the massive fire. Some used inflatable boats to reach it.
Breezy Point is a private beach community in the Rockaway area, a narrow spit of land barely above sea level that thrusts into the Atlantic Ocean southwest of John F. Kennedy International Airport.
It was one of a number of New York City neighborhoods that had been under a mandatory evacuation order as Sandy, one of the biggest storms ever to hit the United States, approached from the southeast.
According to a report from WABC-TV in New York, dozens of residents chose not to obey the evacuation order and as many as 40 had to be rescued by firefighters from homes in the neighborhood as the fire approached, driven by 112 kmh winds. The NYFD spokesman could not verify the television station’s report of rescues.
A blizzard warning covers a large part of West Virginia as snow and high winds blow over Appalachia on the edges of superstorm Sandy.
The National Weather Service said Tuesday a foot and more of snow was reported in lower elevations of West Virginia, where most towns and roads are. High elevations in the mountains were getting more than two feet.
More than 128,000 customers in West Virginia were without power.
AP Photo/Robert RaySnow
plows move through the mountains of West Virginia Monday, Oct.
29,
2012, in Randolph County, W.Va. Sandy was set to collide with a wintry
storm from the
west and cold air streaming down from the Arctic. The
combination superstorm could menace
some 50 million people in the most
heavily populated corridor in the nation, from the East Coast
to the
Great Lakes.
The State Highway Administration in Maryland says the higher elevations in the western state have gotten more than a foot of snow since Monday afternoon, and it was still snowing at 5 a.m. Tuesday.
Sandy wreaked havoc on the New York City subway system, flooding tunnels, garages and rail yards and threatening to paralyze the nation’s largest mass-transit system for days.
“The New York City subway system is 108 years old, but it has never faced a disaster as devastating as what we experienced last night,” Joseph Lhota, the chairman of the Metropolitan Transit Authority, said in a statement early on Tuesday.
All seven subway tunnels running under the East River from Manhattan to Queens and Brooklyn took in water, and any resulting saltwater damage to the system’s electrical components will have to be cleaned – in some cases off-site – before the system can be restored, a spokeswoman for the Metropolitan Transit Authority said on Tuesday.
AP PhotoThis
combination of photos shows above, lower Manhattan dark after the
hybrid
storm Sandy on Monday, Oct. 29, 2012, and below a fully lit
skyline on Jan. 6, 2012, both
seen from the Brooklyn borough of New
York. In an attempt to lessen damage from saltwater
to the subway system
and the electrical network beneath the city's financial district, New
York
City's main utility cut power to about 6,500 customers in lower
Manhattan. But a far wider swath
of the city was hit with blackouts
caused by flooding and transformer explosions.
“It’s really hard to say which areas will come back first,” said Parker, adding it will likely be a combination of limited subway and bus service. “It will come back gradually.”
About 5.3 million people on average use the city’s subway system on weekdays.
Labels: Environment, Nature, United States
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