Long Island under major flood threat

Long Island under major flood threat

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2 MIN READ

New York: Airlines cancelled 300 flights yesterday as a hard-blowing nor'easter gathered strength along the East Coast and threatened to deliver some of the worst flooding to coastal Long Island in 14 years.

The cancellations at the New York area's three major airports affected most carriers, said Steve Coleman, a spokesman for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. More cancellations were expected throughout the day.

Coastal damage

Forecasters expected sustained wind of 64 km/h and a storm surge of 3 to 5 feet, a combination that could cause as much coastal damage as a winter storm that wreaked havoc on the island in late 1992, Governor Eliot Spitzer said.

Heavy rain and thunderstorms extended from Florida up the coast to southern New England yesterday morning.

Spitzer said some low-lying areas of Long Island may need to be evacuated, and he deployed 3,200 members of the National Guard to potential flood areas.

The weather system was forecast to strengthen along the East Coast and form a nor'easter, a storm that follows the coast northward with northeasterly wind driving waves and heavy rain.

The National Weather Service posted storm warnings and watches all along the East Coast, with tornado warnings in South Carolina and flood warnings extending from Virginia north to the New York area. Winter storm warnings were in effect for parts of New England.

The weather service said as much as 20 inches of snow was possible at higher elevations of New York's Adirondacks by the time the storm passes late Monday and Tuesday.

The storm also rained out Sunday's Washington Nationals game with the New York Mets at New York's Shea Stadium.

Last weekend, snow dumped by another major storm system wiped out scheduled Mariners-Indians games at Cleveland for four straight days.

Greek-American parade cancelled

Organisers cancelled the Greek-American Independence Day parade that had been planned on Fifth Avenue.

"It is unusual for this time of year. We probably see a storm like this, at this time of year, probably once every 25 years or so," said Brian Korty, a meteorologist said.

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