WHAT NORTHEAST CITIES FACED Rain (2 to 20 in) over a wide area from the eye—major flooding...
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WHAT NORTHEAST CITIES FACED
• Rain (2 to 20 in) over a wide area from the eye—major flooding exacerbated by slow runoff
• Wind (40 + mph)—damage to trees, homes, buildings, and infrastructure
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WHAT NORTHEAST CITIES FACED
• Beach erosion and mudslides--irreversible loss due to permanent changes in the landscape.
• Tornadoes---no warning; deadly on the local level
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NEW YORK CITY:: Heavy rainfall overflowed sewers,
seawater lapped at sidewalks at the edges of the city, and water cascaded toward Wall
Street, which had been fortified with sandbags.
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MAYOR BLOOMBURG CALLED FOR
RESTORE AND RECOVERY TO START MONDAY, AUGUST 29th
A Ray of Hope for New York City
Drenched, but still Standing
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AUG 28: FORECAST OF IRENE’S PATH
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All parts of the East Coast were on high alert for major flooding as rivers swelled from the runoff of Irene’s
heavy rain fall
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IRENE’S IMPACTS: The storm that marched up the East Coast on
August 27th pounded the entire path with torrential rains and
fierce winds and caused power outages for more than 6 million
homes and businesses.
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OVERALL IMPACTS (continued): The storm caused an unprecedented
shutdown of the transit systems in Washington, Philadelphia, Boston and New York; It left rail and airline service
in the Northeast paralyzed, and left hundreds of thousands of people
without power.
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OVERALL IMPACTS (continued):
Government officials issued evacuation orders for about 3 million people along the Eastern Seaboard,
ranging from 100,000 people in Delaware to a million people in New
Jersey
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FEMA WAS READY
The Federal Emergency Management Agency had 18 disaster-response
teams in place along the East Coast, with stockpiles of food, water and
mobile communications equipment ready to go.
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A COMMON STATEMENT
“This is the worst flooding we’ve ever had,”
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AUGUST 28: IMPACTS IN VIRGINIA
In Virginia, more than 40 cm (16 in) of rain fell in conjunction with the
fourth-highest storm surge on record, and winds reached 140 kph (86 mph), wreaking havoc in towns and cities and causing at least four fatalities.
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IMPACTS IN PHILADELPHIA: Philadelphia, which lies between
the Schulkill and Delaware Rivers, was hit hard; parts of the city were
flooded, water was as high as street-sign levels in some areas, and flash flood warnings were issued for Eastern and Central
Pennsylvania.
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AUGUST 28: IMPACTS IN MASSACHUSETS
Flooding was a particular threat to towns along the Connecticut River
and other waterways in central and western Massachusetts,
where roads were closed and low-lying areas evacuated.
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AUGUST 28: IMPACTS IN RHODE ISLAND
Heavy rain and strong winds with gusts reaching 45 + mph occurred when Irene arrived in Rhode Island
on Sunday morning, knocking down trees and power lines, and leaving more than 100,000 homes
without electricity.
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IMPACTS IN VERMONT:
In Vermont, “epic” flooding from Irene’s heavy rainfall
inundated a number of towns in southern Vermont and isolated many of them,
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Loss estimates (still being tallied ) indicate that Irene will almost certainly rank
among the nation's costliest natural disasters.
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Irene is blamed for at least 45 deaths in the continental
U.S., plus one in Puerto Rico and seven more in the
Dominican Republic and Haiti.
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2011’s TENTH STORM
TROPICAL STORM JOSE
FORMED LATE SUNDAY (AUGUST 28th NEAR BERMUDA
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AUG 28: TROPICAL STORM JOSE DID NOT LIVE LONG
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2011’s ELEVENTH STORM
TROPICAL STORM KATIA
FORMED ON AUGUST 30th AND DEVELOPED INTO SECOND
HURRICANE OF SEASON ON AUG 31
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AUG 31: KATIA DID BECOME A CAT 3 HURRICANE
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SEPT 5: FORECAST FOR KATIA (A CAT 2 HURRICANE)
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2011’s TWELFTH STORM
TROPICAL DEPRESSION 13 BECAME TROPICAL STORM LEE
FORMING IN GULF OF MEXICO ON SEPTEMBER 2
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SEPTEMBER 2: FLORIDA BEING SANDWICHED BY LEE AND KATIA
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SEPT 2: Almost half the oil production in the Gulf of
Mexico and a third of natural gas output in Lee’s
path were shut down.
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RAIN IN LEE (SOURCE: NASA’S AQUA SATELLITE)
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SEPT 4: At 8 a.m. EDT, the National Hurricane Center said Lee's center had come ashore
on the Louisiana coast about 80 km (50 mi) west of Lafayette, LA with maximum sustained winds
of 75 kph (45 mph) headed north at 5 kph (3 mph)
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SEPT 4: NEW ORLEANS escaped without a Katrina-
type, breached-levee, flooding disaster and no deaths, but the
city had some local flooding and tens of thousands were
without power.
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SEPT 4: Since Thursday (Sept 1), parts of New Orleans had as much as 37 cm (15 in) of rain; 40 cm (16 in) in nearby
Gretna, and over 27 cm (11 in) in parts of St. Bernard and
Jefferson parishes.
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RAIN FROM LEE FORECAST FOR MUCH OF EASTERN USA
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SEPTEMBER 6: As of 10 p.m., there were 213,000 power outages reported
statewide, including 162,000 in the Birmingham area..
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SEPT 8: 100,000 flee flash floods after the National Weather Service (NWS)
issued a flash flood warning for several counties in New
York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Connecticut,
Maryland and Virginia
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2011’s THIRTEENTH STORM
THE TROPICAL DEPRESSION, WHICH WAS FORMING IN THE ATLANTIC ON
SEPTEMBER 3rd
BECAME TROPICAL STORM MARIA ON SEPTEMBER 7th
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SEPTEMBER 7: TROPICAL STORM MARIA FORMS AND STARTS PATH
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2011’s FOURTEENTH STORM
TROPICAL STORM NATE FORMED ON SEPTEMBER 8th
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SEPT 8: KATIA (ON RIGHT) AND TS NATE IN SW GULF OF MEXICO