The  National Hurricane Center said the center of the huge storm reached land  near Little Egg Inlet, about 85 miles south-southwest of New York, at  5:35 a.m. The eye previously reached land Saturday in North Carolina  before returning to the Atlantic, straddling the East Coast as it  flooded towns, killed at least eight people and knocked out power to  more than 3 million homes and businesses.
Broadway,  baseball and most other things were shuttered in New York, where the  transit system stopped because of weather for the first time in history.  Mayor Michael Bloomberg warned late Saturday that no matter whether  residents of low-lying areas heeded his calls to evacuate, "The time for  evacuation is over. Everyone should now go inside and stay inside."
Hours  before the storm's center was to reach New York, a 58 mph wind gust hit  John F. Kennedy International Airport and a storm surge of more than  3.5 feet was reported in New York Harbor.National  Weather Service meteorologist Ashley Sears said a storm surge of 4 to 8  feet was expected to rush in just before the eye crosses land. Wind and  rain should start diminishing by midafternoon, but if the storm surge  deluges Lower Manhattan, the water could linger for hours or even a day.
By  Sunday morning, the storm had sustained winds of 75 mph, down from 100  mph on Friday. That's just 1 mph more than the 74 mph minimum for a  Category 1 hurricane, the least threatening on a 1-to-5 scale.
The  total extent of damage Saturday was unclear, but officials and  residents in some areas were relieved to find their communities with  relatively minor problems. Forecasters said the storm remained capable  of causing ruinous flooding with a combination of storm surge, high  tides and 6 to 12 inches of rain.
"Everything is still in effect,"  National Hurricane Center spokesman Dennis Feltgen said. "The last  thing people should do is go outside. They need to get inside and stay  in a safe place until this thing is over."Tornadoes  were reported in Virginia, Maryland and Delaware, and several warnings  were issued elsewhere, including New York and Philadelphia.
Irene  caused flooding from North Carolina to Delaware, both from the  seven-foot waves it pushed into the coast and from heavy rain. Eastern  North Carolina got 10 to 14 inches of rain, according to the National  Weather Service. Virginia's Hampton Roads area was drenched with at  least nine inches, with 16 reported in some spots.
More than one  million of the homes and businesses without power were in Virginia and  North Carolina, the first states in the path of Irene's eye. Then the  storm knocked out power overnight to hundreds of thousands in  Washington, D.C., Maryland, Delaware, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, the New  York City area and Connecticut.In  Virginia, three people were killed by falling trees and about 100 roads  were closed. Emergency crews around the region prepared to head out at  daybreak to assess the damage, though with some roads impassable and  rivers still rising, it could take days.
Some held out optimism that their communities had suffered less damage than they had feared."I  think it's a little strong to say we dodged a bullet. However, it  certainly could have turned out worse for the Hampton Roads area," said  National Weather Service meteorologist Mike Montefusco.
In  Virginia Beach, the city posted on Twitter late Saturday that initial  reports were promising, with the resort area suffering minimal damage.  Ocean City, Md., Mayor Rick Meehan tweeted this synopsis: "Currently in  OC sustained winds of 53mph and gust to 80mph. Rain total 11 inches.  Scattered power outages. No reports of major damage!"
Charlie Koetzle was up at 4 a.m. on Ocean City's boardwalk. Asked about damage, he mentioned a sign that blew down."The beach is still here, and there is lots of it," he said. "I don't think it was as bad as they said it was going to be."
In  North Carolina, where at least two people were killed, Gov. Beverly  Perdue said Irene inflicted significant damage along the North Carolina  coast and some areas were unreachable."Folks  are cut off in parts of North Carolina, and obviously we're not going  to get anybody to do an assessment until it's safe," she said.
Television coverage showed evidence of damage across eastern North Carolina with downed trees and toppled power lines.A  falling tree also killed one person in Maryland. A surfer and another  beachgoer in Florida were killed in heavy waves caused by the storm.
The  storm arrived in Washington just days after an earthquake damaged some  of the capital's most famous structures, including the Washington  Monument. Irene could test Washington's ability to protect its national  treasures and its poor.A  nuclear reactor at Maryland's Calvert Cliffs went offline automatically  when winds knocked off a large piece of aluminum siding that came into  contact with the facility's main transformer late Saturday night. An  "unusual event" was declared, the lowest of four emergency  classifications by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, but Constellation  Energy Nuclear Group spokesman Mark Sullivan said the facility and all  employees were safe.
Near Callway, Md., about 30 families were  warned that a dam could spill over, causing significant flooding, and  that they should either leave their homes or stay upstairs. St. Mary's  County spokeswoman Sue Sabo said the dam was not in danger of breaching.Irene  made its official landfall just after first light near Cape Lookout,  N.C., at the southern end of the Outer Banks, the ribbon of land that  bows out into the Atlantic Ocean. Shorefront hotels and houses were  lashed with waves, two piers were destroyed and at least one hospital  was forced to run on generator power.
Across  the Eastern Seaboard, at least 2.3 million people were under orders to  move to somewhere safer. Thousands went to shelters and many found other  places to stay, but some stayed put.
Annette Burton, 72, was  asked to leave her Chester, Pa., neighborhood because of danger of  rising water from a nearby creek. She said she planned to remain in the  row house along with her daughter and adult grandson, although with a  wary eye on the park across the street that routinely floods during  heavy rains."I'm not a fool; if  it starts coming up from the park, I'm leaving," she said. "It's the  wind I'm more concerned about than anything."
As  the storm's outer bands reached New York on Saturday night, two  kayakers capsized and had to be rescued off Staten Island. They received  summonses and a dressing-down from Bloomberg, who said at a press  conference that they recklessly put rescuers' lives at risk.
Irene  was the first hurricane to make landfall in the continental United  States since 2008, and came almost six years to the day after Katrina  ravaged New Orleans on Aug. 29, 2005. Experts said that probably no  other hurricane in American history had threatened as many people.Airlines  said 9,000 flights were canceled, including 3,000 on Saturday. The  number of passengers affected could easily be millions because so many  flights make connections on the East Coast.
In  New York, authorities undertook the herculean job of bringing the city  to a halt. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority shut down its  subways, trains and buses for a natural disaster for the first time, a  job that began at noon Saturday and took into late that night to  complete.More...

 
 
 
 
 
 8/28/2011 04:50:00 AM
8/28/2011 04:50:00 AM
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