Gold9472
08-15-2005, 09:44 PM
Thousands Blacked Out Across Northeast
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050815/ap_on_re_us/northeast_storms
2 hours, 6 minutes ago
BOSTON - Thousands of people across the Northeast had no electricity for alarm clocks and air conditioners Monday following waves of violent thunderstorms.
Wind gusting to 80 mph knocked trees onto power lines, lightning started fires and torrential rain flooded streets in parts of eastern Pennsylvania, northern New Jersey, southeastern New York, Connecticut and eastern Massachusetts on Sunday.
"It's really testing our crews. It's pretty extensive," Connecticut Light & Power spokesman Mitch Gross said of the damage late Sunday.
Boston's South Shore was hit particularly hard, with severe flooding in Quincy, Braintree, Weymouth and Brockton.
"Half of the city is under water," Brockton police dispatcher Darrelyn Jordan said Sunday night. "We have reports of water going into basements all over the city. We've had people stuck in cars all over the city. We even had to tow a police cruiser out of there with water flowing over the hood."
The mayor of Stamford, Conn., said the damage was the worst since an ice storm in 1973. "We've never seen anything like it," said Dannel Malloy.
More than 50,000 homes and businesses in Massachusetts and more than 80,000 in New Jersey lost power, though most had service restored by Monday morning. Thousands more were blacked out in the New York City suburbs.
The severe weather also forced a suspension of final round play at the PGA Championship in Springfield, N.J., and caused a 90-minute interruption of the MLS soccer game between the MetroStars and the Columbus Crew at New Jersey's Meadowlands.
However, the storms brought at least a little relief from a stifling heat wave that had driven temperatures above 100 degrees with high humidity. Before the storms, Consolidated Edison in New York had record demand for power during the weekend, said spokesman Chris Olert.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050815/ap_on_re_us/northeast_storms
2 hours, 6 minutes ago
BOSTON - Thousands of people across the Northeast had no electricity for alarm clocks and air conditioners Monday following waves of violent thunderstorms.
Wind gusting to 80 mph knocked trees onto power lines, lightning started fires and torrential rain flooded streets in parts of eastern Pennsylvania, northern New Jersey, southeastern New York, Connecticut and eastern Massachusetts on Sunday.
"It's really testing our crews. It's pretty extensive," Connecticut Light & Power spokesman Mitch Gross said of the damage late Sunday.
Boston's South Shore was hit particularly hard, with severe flooding in Quincy, Braintree, Weymouth and Brockton.
"Half of the city is under water," Brockton police dispatcher Darrelyn Jordan said Sunday night. "We have reports of water going into basements all over the city. We've had people stuck in cars all over the city. We even had to tow a police cruiser out of there with water flowing over the hood."
The mayor of Stamford, Conn., said the damage was the worst since an ice storm in 1973. "We've never seen anything like it," said Dannel Malloy.
More than 50,000 homes and businesses in Massachusetts and more than 80,000 in New Jersey lost power, though most had service restored by Monday morning. Thousands more were blacked out in the New York City suburbs.
The severe weather also forced a suspension of final round play at the PGA Championship in Springfield, N.J., and caused a 90-minute interruption of the MLS soccer game between the MetroStars and the Columbus Crew at New Jersey's Meadowlands.
However, the storms brought at least a little relief from a stifling heat wave that had driven temperatures above 100 degrees with high humidity. Before the storms, Consolidated Edison in New York had record demand for power during the weekend, said spokesman Chris Olert.