New York woke up stunned on Thursday, hit by torrential rains and sudden, historic flooding, killing at least 44 across the region as the remnants of Hurricane Ida passed through which wreaked havoc in the South and North. Eastern United States.
Flooded cellars, public transport still blocked and a dramatic toll, New Yorkers were in shock Thursday in the face of the damage from a night of deluge that surprised and paralyzed the American megalopolis after the passage of the post-tropical cyclone Ida . Streets, avenues, expressways were suddenly turned into torrents, both in the neighborhoods of Brooklyn and Queens and in Westchester County, north of the city.
New York woke up stunned on Thursday, hit by torrential rains and sudden, historic flooding, killing at least 44 across the region as the remnants of Hurricane Ida passed through which wreaked havoc in the South and North. Eastern United States.
Streets, avenues, expressways were suddenly turned into torrents, both in the neighborhoods of Brooklyn and Queens and in Westchester County, north of the city.
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These remnants of post-tropical cyclone Ida, which ravaged the Louisiana coast of New Orleans last weekend, caused flooding that crippled the American megalopolis.
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Hundreds of flights have been canceled at New York’s Newark, LaGuardia and JFK airports.
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In the middle of the night, the new governor of the State of New York, Kathy Hochul, had declared a “state of emergency” following the “major” floods in all the border counties of the city, potentially affecting some 20 million. inhabitants.
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According to the NWS, this state of emergency due to flash floods is a first in the history of the megalopolis, already hit in October 2012 by Hurricane Sandy.
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Despite the prevention messages from the authorities in the evening, families found themselves tragically trapped in their homes by the water.
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The gigantic New York subway system was at a standstill Thursday morning, after many stations flooded.
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The NWS, the US weather service, recorded an all-time high of 80mm of rain in one hour in Central Park.
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In the four corners of the city of eight million inhabitants surrounded by water, inhabitants woke up with their flooded cellars and sometimes pieces of trees lying in their street, under a sky that became blue and sunny again.
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Several voices attributed this event to climate change, while New York had already suffered very heavy rains at the end of August, when Storm Henri passed.