Wet Northeast

Jiro

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Rain is over but not problems in water-logged Northeast
(CNN) -- The rain has stilled, but the water-weary Northeast was left Wednesday to deal with flooded roads and basements as it waited for the water levels to drop. Rhode Island has been hit particularly hard.

"Looking for some positives here, the water has begun to recede," said Rhode Island Gov. Donald Carcieri at an afternoon news conference. He said the state has had some bad accidents but no fatalities.

It's "really very positive and encouraging given the amount of water and the circumstances that so many of our citizens have faced," he said.

A rainstorm formed earlier this week and soaked the Northeast on Tuesday, exacerbating the remaining effects of another major storm from two weeks ago. Although Tuesday was a rough and rainy day for most in the region, Rhode Island appeared to fare the worst.

Is it flooding near you? Share photos, videos and stories

"We're just all ready to throw the keys on the counter and walk out of the houses," one Cranston, Rhode Island, resident said. "It's at that point now, you know?"

The storm dumped 8.75 inches of rain in East Providence, 7.6 inches in downtown Providence and 5 inches in Cranston, all in Rhode Island, said Tom Econopouly, a senior hydrologist at the Northeast River Forecast Center in Taunton, Massachusetts.

"I can turn on the jet skis and go for a ride," one Rhode Island woman said. "What can you do? Mother Nature's winning."

All eyes were on the Pawtuxet River, which runs through Cranston. The river crested at 20.79 feet Wednesday, nearly 12 feet above flood stage, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Advanced Hydrometeorological Service. The water level began a slow decline during the day but remained above 20 feet at 5 p.m. Wednesday.

See Rhode Island's roads under water

"We have some historic flooding going on in places we've never had flooding before. We have numerous streets that are closed, and they're telling us the worst is still yet to come," said Cranston Police Lt. Stephen Antonucci.

Cranston Mayor Allan Fung said the city was facing dire circumstances, even though the weather was now cooperating.

"One of my sewer pump stations just failed, so it's some bad news for many of the residents," he told ABC's "Good Morning America." He said the city was asking people to conserve water.

About 130 homes have been evacuated, many voluntarily, he said. Schools were closed, as were some roads. "It's some very dangerous conditions," he told ABC.

The state shut down parts of Interstate 95 in both directions, and Carcieri said Wednesday that it was expected to remain closed Thursday morning. Commuters will have to take alternate routes, he said. "That means it's going to be slow. It's going to be slow-going, nothing we can do about that," he said.

Amtrak said Wednesday that it suspended the Acela Express Service from New Haven, Connecticut; to Boston, Massachusetts, because of "high water conditions along the tracks."

It said service east of Providence will continue to operate but that "passengers should expect delays through the area."

Earlier in the week, President Obama extended a state of emergency for Rhode Island, freeing up federal dollars to help with relief efforts.

A spokesman for National Grid Energy Services said 12,000 to 14,000 customers were without electricity in the Cranston area, where a substation was underwater.

In Westerly, another 9,600 customers were in the dark, the spokesman said. He told area residents to expect rotating outages throughout the night and predicted they would continue for days.

The National Grid asked customers with service to conserve power.

"Historic rain falls and flood conditions are causing power outages throughout the region. Customers in some areas may be without power for several days," it said.

In Connecticut, Gov. Jodi Rell said a state of emergency put in place for the storm earlier this month remains in effect. "The relentless rain has created extremely dangerous situations, especially in eastern Connecticut," she said Tuesday.

She announced that she has directed the Department of Public Safety to reassign all available state troopers to eastern Connecticut to assist with road closures and other emergencies.

In Yantic, Connecticut, the Yantic River set a record when it crested Tuesday at 13.6 feet -- 4.6 feet above flood stage. Yet another record was predicted for Saxonville, Massachusetts, where the Sudbury River was expected to reach 13.4 feet Wednesday afternoon. The flood stage is 10 feet.

Floodwaters rush through "Mystic Pizza" town

In Massachusetts, four to seven inches of rain fell in the eastern part of the state during this latest storm, said Scott MacLeod, a public information officer with the Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency in Framingham.

Most of the flooding in Massachusetts occurred in the Bay State's southeastern corner county of Bristol, where about 200 people were evacuated, he said.

Gov. Deval Patrick has declared a state of emergency and activated the National Guard, which was prepared to assist overnight.

A handful of shelters were open, though few people were staying there. No reports of power outages in the state were made, MacLeod said. "It's mainly flooding issues -- closed roads, flooded roadways and basements."
CNN's Reynolds Wolf contributed to this report.
 
For Flooded Northeast, the Worst Is Yet to Come
"None of us alive have seen the flooding that we are experiencing now or going to experience," Rhode Island Gov. Don Carcieri said Tuesday night. "This is unprecedented in our state's history."

CRANSTON, R.I. -- Flooding on a scale rarely seen in New England forced hundreds of residents from their homes Wednesday, overwhelmed sewage systems and isolated communities as it washed out bridges and rippled across thoroughfares from Maine to Connecticut.

As three days of record-breaking rains tapered to a drizzle, forecasters warned the worst of widespread flooding was still ahead as rivers and streams had yet to crest -- for the second time in a month.

In Rhode Island, which bore the brunt of the storm, residents were experiencing the worst flooding in more than 100 years. Stretches of Interstate 95, the main route linking Boston to New York, were closed and could remain so for days. Amtrak suspended trains through the area because of water on the tracks.

VIDEO: Rainfall at Record Levels

Every resident of Rhode Island, a state of about 1 million, was asked to conserve water and electricity because of flooded sewage systems and electrical substations. Rising waters either stranded hundreds of people or sent them to shelters. Many of those who stayed behind appeared shell-shocked, still recovering from floods two weeks ago caused by as much as 10 inches of rain.

Monica Bourgeois, 45, cried Wednesday morning as she stood outside her home in Cranston, where a sewer pump station gave out and hundreds of residents had evacuated by early Wednesday. The Pawtuxet River had turned her lawn into a lake and flooded her basement with six feet of still-rising water.

"It's over the furnace. We're afraid it's going to hit the electrical panel. It's so awful. The whole basement is destroyed. The whole basement is under water," she said.

"I have absolutely no idea how we're going to pay for this. I'm extremely, extremely worried. Do you know how much a new furnace costs? We're just praying to God for some help."

The flooding caps a month that set rainfall records across the region. Boston measured nearly 14 inches for March, breaking the previous record for the month, set in 1953. New Jersey, New York City and Portland, Maine, surpassed similar records. Providence registered its rainiest month on record, period, with a total of more than 15 inches of rain in March.

"None of us alive have seen the flooding that we are experiencing now or going to experience," Rhode Island Gov. Don Carcieri said. "This is unprecedented in our state's history."

President Barack Obama issued an emergency declaration late Tuesday for Rhode Island, ordering federal aid for disaster relief and authorizing the Federal Emergency Management Agency to coordinate relief efforts.

But the havoc was spread throughout the region, as National Guard troops went into action in Rhode Island, Massachusetts and Connecticut. A pond dam in Porter, Maine, let loose Tuesday morning, sending a torrent of water down country roads but injuring no one. Water covered roads in New Hampshire.

Stonington, Conn., a coastal town on a peninsula, was largely cut off as two of its three bridges went out. A bridge also gave out in Freetown, Mass., isolating about 1,000 residents.

Non-essential state workers in Rhode Island were given the day off, and state officials asked schools and private businesses to consider closing, as well. Officials in Warwick, where a water and sewage treatment plant failed, asked residents not to launder clothes or flush toilets. The state also asked people to stay off highways and local roads.

Heavy rains in Connecticut caused the earth under a Middletown apartment complex parking lot to give way, leaving two buildings teetering over the ravine of a river. Residents were taken to an emergency shelter at a high school.

Authorities also evacuated 50 units at a condominium complex in Jewett City in eastern Connecticut because a sewage treatment plant next door was under at least 4 feet of water.

In Massachusetts, the biggest concerns were in the southeastern part of the state, where a highway was closed. Heavy rains buckled a road in Fall River, near the Rhode Island border.

In Peabody, north of Boston, a court closed Wednesday because flooding made it inaccessible. Some residents there evacuated. Downtown businesses piled sandbags at their front doors and nearby streets were closed.

Demetri Skalkos, co-owner of McNamara's liquor store, said about three feet of water stood in the basement. He said he was worried about losing business over the traditionally busy Easter period.

"This is the Holy Week," he said. "... If we don't do business now, when are we going to do business?"
 
I fail to understand why the engineers and urban planners did not have heavy raining in their mind when designing the civilization to handle the water situation safely and better. Northeast is no stranger to flood and heavy raining for many years. :dunno:
 
My mom was in Rhode Island earlier and she said it was awful! She was able to catch a flight out though!
 
Very Lucky My home do not have any problem flood! :thumb:
 
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