North-east
US recovers from snowstorm as freezing temperatures sink in
Tidal
the Guardian,
3 January, 2013
Tidal surges and gusts of up to 75mph battered parts of the UK on Friday as officials urged the public not to put lives at risk by storm and wave watching, and ministers sought to tackle a potential political storm over allegations that flood prevention could be a victim of spending cuts.
•
Cleanup
continues as airports and transport services reopen
•
Mayor
Bill de Blasio warns of severe cold and driving dangers
3
January, 2014
Cities
across the north-east US began the slow process of returning to
normality on Friday, after a heavy snowstorm dumped up to two feet of
snow on parts of the region.
Runways
at airports in Boston, New York and New Jersey were reopened by
midday, although passengers still faced lengthy delays. Mass transit
systems were largely operational.
While
the snow had passed by Friday afternoon, the National Weather Service
warned that bitterly cold temperatures would remain in the mid-west
and north-east across the weekend, with the wind chill dropping as
low as -50F (-45.6C) in some places. Officials warned people not to
drive unless absolutely necessary and to stay indoors if possible.
More
than 2,000 flights had been cancelled across the country by 1pm
Friday, according to the Flight Aware monitoring website, and over
2,700 flights were delayed.
Boston
and New England saw the worst of the storm, with Boston.com reporting
that the highest totals were in Essex County, Massachusetts. Boxford
saw 24.3in of snow and Topsfield 23.5in, the website said.
Hundreds
of schools were closed in Boston and New York City, while
non-emergency Massachusetts state workers were told to stay at home.
Boston's Logan airport had reopened by mid-morning, according to its
website, although many flights were delayed and cancelled.
In
New York and New Jersey JFK, runways LaGuardia and Newark airports
were open and flights were arriving and departing after poor
visibility and high winds forced suspensions early Friday. At JFK one
of the runways had been reopened by around 10.30am and crews were
working to open the other three. The Port Authority of New York and
New Jersey warned that travellers will face delays at all three
airports.
The
storm provided a first test for Bill De Blasio, New York City’s new
mayor. After the 2010 blizzard, former mayor Michael Bloomberg was
heavily criticised for clearing Manhattan streets first. In a press
conference on Friday morning at a sanitation department depot in
Queens, the new mayor thanked John Doherty, the sanitation
commissioner, and acknowledged the early test the storm had provided
to his leadership.
"It
would have been nice to have talked about how to handle a snowstorm
in an abstract exercise, but we didn't get to do that, we got the
real thing."
Sanitation
workers were working 12-hour shifts to clear the roads, De Blasio
said. As of 4am there were nearly 2,500 plows on the streets. De
Blasio said 100% of primary roads had been ploughed, 92% of secondary
roads and 93% of tertiary roads. The mayor praised "an
extraordinary level of performance" by the sanitation department
in clearing streets but urged people to stay off the roads.
More
than a foot of snow fell in parts of the mid-west before the storm
sprawled across the north-east. The system brought freezing
temperatures 20 to 30 degrees below the average for early January
across the region.
The
NWS warned on Friday that "some of the coldest air of the year"
would arrive in the northern tier of the US by Saturday. The wind
chill could approach -50F (-45.6C) in parts of the mid-west over the
weekend, the NWS said, while parts of New England could expect -20F
(-28.9C).
"Forecast
offices over [the upper mid-west] suggest lows into the -20s across
North Dakota/Minnesota with breezy conditions lowering wind chills to
dangerously low levels. Current guidance indicates wind chill
temperatures may approach -50F on Saturday night," the NWS said
in an alert.
De
Blasio said peope should stay off the roads and not underestimate the
“deceptively cold” temperatures. "It's as cold as it's been
all year. If you stay out there too long it will be bad and it will
be dangerous."
Tidal
Latest UK storm 'may be last one for a while'
Heavy rain, strong winds and tidal surges cause widespread flooding but Met Office says sunshine and showers are on way
the Guardian,
3 January, 2013
Tidal surges and gusts of up to 75mph battered parts of the UK on Friday as officials urged the public not to put lives at risk by storm and wave watching, and ministers sought to tackle a potential political storm over allegations that flood prevention could be a victim of spending cuts.
At
one stage 21 severe flood warnings were issued by the Environment
Agency with parts of Wales, Scotland, western England and Northern
Ireland most affected.
Police
said they were "extremely concerned" for the safety of
Henry Martin, 18, who has not been seen since he left his home in
Membland, Newton Ferrers, near Plymouth, Devon, to take pictures of
the weatheron
Thursday, and air, sea and land searches were under way.
Ferry
services were cancelled, train services disrupted and roads closed,
but conditions on Friday were not as bad as some authorities feared
they might be.
Workers
repair a storm-damaged road in Amroth, west Wales. Photograph: Aled
Llywelyn/Athena Pictures
The
Met Office is forecasting some respite on Saturday from some of the
wettest and windiest weather in decades which, as well as
widespread flooding,
has caused power cuts and travel disruption.
Even
so, up to 30mm of rain will fall on already sodden southern areas of
England on Saturday with a threat of snow on higher ground in more
northerly parts of the UK. In Scotland, "be aware" weather
warnings have been issued for the Strathclyde, Tayside, Fife,
South-west Scotland, Lothian & Borders and Central regions.
The
warning also covers Northern Ireland and parts of the north of
England. Existing yellow warnings for wind and rain across much of
the country remain in place.
Another
depression due to blow in from the Atlantic on Sunday could bring
winds of up to 50mph rather than the gusts of up to 75mph that struck
the UK on Friday.
Helen
Chivers, head of news at the Met Office, said that "might be the
last really big storm for a little while". More unsettled
weather would follow but was more likely to be of the sunshine and
showers variety than the hatch-battening events that forced yet more
mopping up after a combination of high spring tides, high winds and
low pressure.
A
check on wind speeds suggests December provided the stormiest end to
the year since 1969 and one of the windiest months since January
1993. In Scotland, it was the wettest month in records dating back to
1910.
A family is caught out while watching the waves at Mullion Cove,
Cornwall. Photograph: Apex
Appeals
to the public not to walk on coastal paths and promenades and near
flood water failed to deter storm watchers in some parts of the
country. A man was seen swimming in the flooded river Nith between
Dumfries and Kingholm Quay, and Carmarthenshire council called in the
police to move on sightseers at Burry Port, south-west Wales.
The
coastal town, which sits on a tidal estuary, was lashed by huge waves
and winds of more than 70mph during the morning high tide. "What
they cannot know is what is in these waves. The sea takes up a lot of
rock, rubble and stones and throws them violently about," a
council spokesman said. "Stones weighing up to one hundredweight
were being flung into the car park and people were literally putting
their lives at risk by being there."
Tom
Mansell, RNLI divisional operations manager and flood rescue team
leader in the south-west, said: "The danger is really where
people are going down to have a look. They don't understand how
dangerous the sea can be. We would say please, please keep away from
this water."
As
towns and villages across the country were inundated by sea and river
flooding, a pregnant woman in Cardigan was among people rescued from
homes by firefighters. In Pwllheli, north Wales, the lifeboat crew
helped the fire and rescue service move five people from a flooded
caravan park.
Belfast
escaped an expected tidal surge at midday on Friday, preventing
further major flooding in the capital of Northern Ireland. Police had
built a wall of sandbags in central and eastern parts of the city,
including the area close to the harbour. The river Bann in Coleraine
burst its banks on Friday morning, flooding the centre of the County
Derry town.
Across
the border in the Republic, Galway sustained the worst of the
flooding, with the seaside resort of Salthill having its promenade
submerged and a local leisure centre near the beach being forced to
close until next week due to storm damage.
In
Scotland, the A75 in Dumfriesshire was closed for several hours after
a lorry overturned in strong winds, and the A78 between Largs and
Skelmorlie was closed by flooding. The Skye, Tay and Forth road
bridges were barred to high-sided vehicles and speed restrictions put
in place for other traffic.
Waves crash over the promenade in Saundersfoot, west Wales. Photograph:
Rebecca Naden/Reuters
Owen
Paterson, the environment secretary, is under pressure over job
losses in roles connected to floods at the Environment Agency for
England and Wales. He insisted "frontline services" would
be protected, but Paul Leinster, chief executive of the agency, has
admitted some
roles in flood risk management are likely to go as
part of 1,500 job losses.
After
meetings with Leinster and the government's emergency committee,
Paterson said: "Like all departments, this department has had to
make efficiencies given the dire financial position we inherited when
we came to office."
Leinster
had "assured me he has every intention of protecting frontline
services concerned with flooding … This government is spending more
than any previous government on flood defences".
Anne
McIntosh, Conservative chair of the Commons environment committee, conceded there would never be enough money to do everything to
protect the country from floods, but told the BBC: "We do have
to learn from previous flooding and I think we do have to do more to
prepare for these floods in between – maybe have an annual
rehearsal, bringing all the emergency services together".
Her
remarks were echoed by Louise Ellman, Labour chair of the transport
committee, who has summoned rail and airport bosses to appear before
MPs.
"We
need to be more prepared to deal with different kinds of weather. In
2009 we had very heavy snowstorms, they were the worst for 30 years
and we were caught unprepared. I think now we're dealing with snow a
lot better but there are other kinds of bad weather. We see floods,
we see gales, and we have to be ready for that too."
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