Rain, flooding force evacuations, wash out bridges, close highways in Northeast

By Eric Tucker, AP
Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Rain, flooding force evacuations in Northeast

CRANSTON, R.I. — A rainstorm that socked the Northeast is winding down, but forecasters say more widespread flooding is yet to come.

Rivers from Maine down to New York aren’t expected to crest until later Wednesday or perhaps Thursday. Rhode Island officials are bracing for what is expected to be the most severe flooding to hit the state in more than 100 years.

Basements are filled with water across a wide section of eastern New England.

A bridge gave out in Freetown, Mass., and another one linking Groton and Stonington in Connecticut also has been washed out.

Interstate 95 in Warwick, R.I., has been closed.

About 50 units at a condominium complex in Jewett City, Conn., are being evacuated because a sewage treatment plant next door is under at least 4 feet of water.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.

CRANSTON, R.I. (AP) — The second record storm that socked the Northeast this month was reduced to drizzle as it began to wind down early Wednesday but the worst of widespread flooding is yet to come, forecasters say.

Rivers from Maine down to New York weren’t even expected to crest until Wednesday or Thursday. And in Rhode Island, officials are bracing for what is expected to be the most severe flooding to hit the state in more than 100 years.

“None of us alive have seen the flooding that we are experiencing now or going to experience,” Rhode Island Gov. Don Carcieri said Tuesday night. “This is unprecedented in our state’s history.”

Interstate 95, a major East Coast thoroughfare, was closed for about a quarter-mile in Warwick, R.I., because of flooding and down to one lane in other areas of Rhode Island. Crews were working overnight to stack sandbags but it wasn’t clear whether the highway would reopen for the morning commute, though the closure of some schools and businesses will ease traffic somewhat.

President Barack Obama issued an emergency declaration late Tuesday for the state, ordering federal aid for disaster relief and authorizing the Federal Emergency Management Agency to coordinate relief efforts.

The rain came as residents were still recovering from a storm two weeks ago that dumped as much as 10 inches on the region. Business owners in the flood zone are still grappling with the impact of lost income.

“It’s definitely devastating,” said liquor store owner Maria Medeiros, whose family-owned business in Providence now abuts raging rapids of water and streets barricaded by the police. “Situations like this, what can you do?”

Across the street, workers in a Blockbuster video store scrambled to raise DVDs to top shelves to avoid any damage.

Even fishermen were hit: Shellfish beds in Rhode Island and Massachusetts were closed because of sewage overflows and failures at wastewater treatment facilities caused by flooding.

National Guard troops were activated in Rhode Island, Massachusetts and Connecticut. Scattered home evacuations were reported in those states, as well, and more than 100 people were ordered to leave an apartment complex in Milford, N.H. No deaths were reported in those states as of early Wednesday.

Records fell across the region.

The more than 14 inches of rain that fell this month in Boston broke the previous March record of 11, according to the National Weather Service. New Jersey and parts of New York City also set March records. And by Tuesday afternoon, Providence had recorded more than 15 inches of rain in March, becoming the rainiest of any month on record.

In one water-weary neighborhood along the Pawtuxet River in Cranston, basements were flooded by early Tuesday morning as water levels approached waist-deep levels toward the end of the street. One resident hung a sign: “FEMA + State + City of Cranston. Buy our houses.”

“Right now it’s bad and getting worse,” said Brian Dupont, a real estate broker who owns two homes on the street. He feared the dozens of sandbags protecting the homes would offer minimal protection.

Standing water pooled on or rushed across roads in the region, making driving treacherous and forcing closures. In Maine, a dam in Porter let loose Tuesday morning, sending a torrent of water down country roads. No evacuations or injuries were reported.

In Connecticut, heavy rains caused the earth under a Middletown apartment complex parking lot to give way, leaving two buildings teetering over the ravine of a river. Residents were evacuated to an emergency shelter at a local high school.

North of New York City, a man in his 70s drove past a barricade onto a flooded section of the Bronx River Parkway and had to be rescued from the roof of his truck, Westchester County police said. On Long Island, rain coupled with tides inundated a 20-mile stretch of oceanfront road in Southampton.

Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Bob Salsberg in Wayland, Mass., Stephen Singer and Pat Eaton-Robb in Hartford, Conn., Clarke Canfield in Portland, Maine, and Samantha Henry in Newark, N.J.

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