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VIDEOS: Water spurted into NYC Subway stations from severe storms; several train lines were suspended


In September of last year, Hurricane Ida flooded several New York Subway stations.

Foto:
David Dee Delgado / Getty Images

Brigades spent several hours last night battling the flooding reported at several New York Subway stations due to storms reported this Monday.

The train and bus transport service was suspended in several stations as workers drained the water and cleared debris from the tracks.

One of the most affected lines of the train was the Awhose travel was interrupted between 181st Street and Inwood-207.

It was not until around 6 am today that the outlook improved and service began to be restored.

Many streets in the area resembled rivers, including Nagle Avenue and Dyckman Street, where water covered the tires of several vehicles.

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ABC 7 reported that the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) reported that service on lines B and D was suspended after several roads were flooded. Images on social networks show the water spurting from the roof of some stations.

Additionally, lines to Harlem and New Haven were suspended to and from Grand Central Station due to the effects of the storms.

The Metro-North Hudson Line also reported delays due to a train malfunction near Spuyten Duyvil and rail problems between Riverdale and Greystone.

A string of storms triggered weather warnings from New York City to the Jersey Shore and Fairfield County in Connecticut on Monday.

the floods caused interruptions in public transport services in much of the tri-state area.

In New York, the warnings were in effect for Manhattan, Queens, the Bronx, Long Island, and Westchester and Rockland counties; as well as northern NJ and Fairfield County in Connecticut.

As for flood warnings, they were extended to Manhattan, the Bronx, Long Island Westchester, and Fairfield and Bergen counties.

Following the storms, the area is experiencing a heat wave that will last this week, and probably into next.

Temperatures are expected to exceed 90°F.

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