Philadelphia commuter highways closed

A resident turns back from crossing floodwaters in the Manayunk neighbourhood of Philadelphia. Widespread flooding brought on by the remnants of Tropical Storm Lee was being blamed for two deaths in Pennsylvania, where inundated communities were evacuated and state offices closed down on Thursday because of the rising waters.

A resident turns back from crossing floodwaters in the Manayunk neighbourhood of Philadelphia. Widespread flooding brought on by the remnants of Tropical Storm Lee was being blamed for two deaths in Pennsylvania, where inundated communities were evacuated and state offices closed down on Thursday because of the rising waters.

Published Sep 9, 2011

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Philadelphia - Relentless rain spawned by the remnants of Tropical Storm Lee caused major flooding in the US East on Thursday, forcing the evacuation of 65 000 people from the northeastern Pennsylvania city of Wilkes-Barre and swamping homes and businesses from Maryland to New England.

Evacuations also were ordered in New York state due to flooding caused by the same drenching weather system that earlier dumped torrents of rain on the Gulf Coast region and tested the flood defences of New Orleans.

About 20 000 residents of Binghamton, near the Pennsylvania border, were ordered to evacuate, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said. There were more evacuations in Broome, Schenectady and Schoharie counties in New York, authorities said.

Rivers and creeks already swollen by Hurricane Irene, which caused flooding in late August in parts of the same region, threatened cities and towns throughout Pennsylvania, New York and New Jersey.

Railways and busy commuter highways were closed in the Philadelphia area and at least three deaths related to the flooding were reported in Pennsylvania, whose capital Harrisburg declared a state of emergency.

As much as 30cm of rain was recorded outside of Harrisburg in central Pennsylvania.

Some 65 000 people were evacuated from Wilkes-Barre early on Thursday because of the rising waters of the Susquehanna River and another 35 000 people in surrounding counties were threatened, Luzerne County Commissioner Stephen Urban said.

The river was expected to crest at 12.4m later in the day and levies in Wilkes-Barre are built to withstand waters up to 12.5m, Urban said.

“Our number one priority is protecting lives and getting people out of harm's way,” Urban said.

In New York state, mandatory evacuations were declared for some 10 000 residents in Binghamton and Broome counties, near the Pennsylvania border, as well as towns in Schenectady County and Schoharie County.

Torrential overnight rain, accompanied by thunder and lightning, soaked an already-soggy Philadelphia. Flooding, mudslides and rock slides closed some of the area's busiest commuter highways, including the Schuylkill Expressway and US Route 1, authorities said.

Railways were also shut because of flooding, including four heavily travelled commuter lines run by the Southeast Pennsylvania Transit Authority (SEPTA).

In New York state, Amtrak shut rail service west of Albany and officials anticipated numerous highway closures.

In New Jersey, roads closed included busy Route 73 and parts of Route 29 in Trenton along the Delaware River banks.

Weather forecaster Evan Myers said: “The combination of previous record rainfall, current tropical downpours from Lee, urban development and an already fragile watershed will lead to historic flooding in part of the Northeast this week.”

The costs of the last eight months of damaging weather in the United States are mounting for insurance companies.

Tornadoes and storms in the Midwest pushed American Family Insurance's storm and catastrophe losses to $1-billion for 2011, only the third time its payments have reached that level, the Wisconsin-based company said.

That total includes estimated claim payments of more than $100-million for victims of the May tornado in Joplin, Missouri that killed 160 people. - Reuters

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