US East Coast shuts down | Inquirer News

US East Coast shuts down

/ 12:13 AM October 30, 2012

STORM SURGE THREAT Molly White, 9, from Frankford, Delaware, covers her head as she is pelted by sand blown by strong winds on the beach on Sunday in Ocean City, Maryland. AP

NEW YORK—Forecasters warned that the New York City region could face the worst of Hurricane Sandy as it picked up strength and turned toward the US East Coast’s largest cities Monday, forcing the shutdown of financial markets and mass transit, sending coastal residents fleeing and threatening high winds, rain and a wall of water up to 3.3 meters tall. It could endanger up to 50 million people for days.

Sandy strengthened before dawn and stayed on a predicted path toward New York, Washington, Baltimore and Philadelphia— putting it on a collision course with two other weather systems that would create a superstorm with the potential for havoc over 1,280 kilometers from the East Coast to the Great Lakes. Up to 0.9 meters of snow were even forecast for mountainous parts of West Virginia.

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Airports closed, and authorities warned that the time for evacuation was running out or already past. Many workers planned to stay home as subways, buses and trains shut down across the region under the threat of flooding that could inundate tracks and tunnels. Utilities anticipated widespread power failures.

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The center of the storm was positioned to come ashore Monday night in New Jersey, meaning the worst of the surge could be in the northern part of that state and in New York City and on Long Island. Higher tides brought by a full moon compounded the threat to the metropolitan area of about 20 million people.

“This is the worst-case scenario,” said Louis Uccellini, environmental prediction chief for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

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Airlines canceled nearly 7,500 flights and Amtrak began suspending train service across the Northeast.

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As rain from the leading edges began to fall over the Northeast on Sunday, hundreds of thousands of people from Maryland to Connecticut were ordered to leave low-lying coastal areas, including 375,000 in lower Manhattan and other parts of New York City, 50,000 in Delaware and 30,000 in Atlantic City, New Jersey, where the city’s 12 casinos shut down for only the fourth time ever.

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President Barack Obama declared emergencies in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, authorizing federal relief work to begin well ahead of time. He promised the government would “respond big and respond fast” after the storm hits.

Obama cancelled a campaign appearance in Florida to stay in Washington and monitor the storm, with Election Day just a week away.

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Authorities warned that New York could get hit with a surge of seawater that could swamp parts of lower Manhattan, flood subway tunnels and cripple the network of electrical and communications lines that are vital to the nation’s financial center.

Major US financial markets, including the New York Stock Exchange, Nasdaq and CME Group in Chicago, planned a rare shutdown Monday. The United Nations also shut down.

New York shut down all train, bus and subway service Sunday night. More than 5 million riders a day depend on the transit system. Boston, Philadelphia and Washington, D.C., also shut down their transit systems. Authorities moved to close the Holland Tunnel, which connects New York and New Jersey, and a tunnel between Manhattan and Brooklyn.

“If you don’t evacuate, you are not only endangering your life, you are also endangering the lives of the first responders who are going in to rescue you,” Mayor Michael Bloomberg warned. “This is a serious and dangerous storm.”

Sandy, a Category 1 hurricane with top sustained winds of 144 kph early Monday, was blamed for 65 deaths in the Caribbean before it began traveling northward, parallel to the Eastern Seaboard.

The storm was centered about 415 kilometers south-southeast of New York City. As of 11 a.m., it was moving at 29 kph, with hurricane-force winds extending an extraordinary 281 kilometers from its center.

Sandy was expected to make landfall Monday evening or night along or just south of the southern New Jersey coast, then collide with a wintry storm moving in from the west and cold air streaming down from the Arctic and cut across into Pennsylvania and travel up through New York state.

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie was typically blunt: “Don’t be stupid. Get out.”

Coast Guard officials rescued 14 people and searched for two more who had abandoned a replica of the tall ship made famous in the film “Mutiny on the Bounty” after the vessel began taking on water off the North Carolina coast.

In Maryland, the storm caused significant damage to a large fishing pier in the beach resort of Ocean City. Gov. Martin O’Malley says the fishing pier is now “half-gone.”

Despite the dire warnings, some refused to budge.

Jonas Clark of Manchester Township, New Jersey — right in Sandy’s projected path — stood outside a convenience store, calmly sipping a coffee and wondering why people were working themselves “into a tizzy.”

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“I’ve seen a lot of major storms in my time, and there’s nothing you can do but take reasonable precautions and ride out things the best you can,” said Clark, 73.

TAGS: East Coast, storm, Weather

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