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Storms Still Battering Midwest
by Brian A Kennedy | December 4, 2007 at 05:11 am | 907 views | 11 comments | 12 recommendations
Hurricane-strength winds whipped through the Northwest yesterday and Sunday, killing at least two people and causing all sorts of damage.
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - Hurricane-force winds and heavy rain battered the Northwest for a second day Monday, killing at least two people and leaving entire communities dark and isolated as the storms blocked roads with trees, power lines, high water and mud.
Dozens of people stranded by flood waters required rescue as the second of two storms blew through, and Oregon transportation officials warned drivers not to attempt passage through the Coast Range.
"This storm is hitting the coast so hard, it's not leaving any road open," Transportation Department spokeswoman Christine Miles said.
The first wave of severe weather in the Northwest, which hit Sunday, was expected to reach the Upper Midwest with snow Tuesday, the National Weather Service said. That region had already been battered over the weekend by ice and snow before the storm blew into the Northeast on Monday.
The governors of Washington and Oregon declared states of emergency, which will allow for easier aid to stricken communities.
About 150 people were stranded at some point Monday across the region, said Washington Gov. Chris Gregoire. About half were rescued by Monday evening, many of them by boat, she said.
An estimated 30 to 40 people evacuated a flooded mobile home park near Astoria in northwestern Oregon, said Peter Williamson of the Red Cross.
Bremerton, Wash., reported 10.78 inches of rain in 24 hours, said Weather Service meteorologist Chris Burke.
Wind gusts of more than 100 mph were reported along the Oregon coast, with the highest reading at 129 mph at Bay City, the Weather Service said. Gusts hit 81 mph at Hoquiam, Wash., it said.
Mudslides halted north-south Amtrak passenger train service between Eugene, Ore., and Vancouver, British Columbia, and flooding forced the indefinite closure of Interstate 5, the main route between Seattle and Portland. To the east, snowslides temporarily closed major Cascade Mountain passes carrying traffic on Interstate 90 and U.S. 2.
Most major roads in southwestern Washington's Grays Harbor and Pacific counties were closed, and virtually all roads into the coastal city of Aberdeen were cut off, officials said.
"In 30 years of law enforcement, it's as bad as I've ever seen," said Grays Harbor County Sheriff Michael J. Whelan, whose own truck was smashed in his driveway by a falling tree.
Telephone and other communications were so were so tenuous that it was impossible to determine how many people were forced out of their homes, said Abby Kershaw of Oregon Emergency Management.
Pacific Power reported 40,000 homes without power in Oregon, and it could be days before electricity is fully restored, the utility said. Transmission poles 100 feet tall were toppled, and large sections of lines lay on the ground.
"The ground is saturated from intensive rainfall and trees are leaning into power lines and dropping to the ground," the utility said in a statement.
More than 80,000 people lost power in Washington, Gov. Chris Gregoire said.
The Weather Service issued flood warnings in Oregon for seven coastal rivers and two inland. The storms curtailed state government functions, as driver's license and employment offices in Columbia County filled with flood waters.
In southwestern Washington, one man died when a tree fell on him as he was trying to clear one that had been toppled, said Grays Harbor County Sheriff's Detective Ed McGowan. Another died of a medical problem after the power went out, he said.
The Chehalis River was expected to crest at nearly 75 feet Tuesday, which would put Interstate 5 under about five feet of water, said state Transportation Secretary Paula Hammond said.
"There's nothing. You can't get in or out," homeowner Yvonne Powers said in the southwest Washington town of Pe Ell, on the Chehalis.
In Olympia, the rain turned a small creek into a roiling, muddy surge that tore through a wall at the Ranch House BBQ. Tables and booths were strewn across the street, and a storage shed was pushed about 300 feet away.
Christy Romo, who lives just uphill from the restaurant, said she could hear the floodwaters coming and started packing before the first floor of her cabin was inundated.
"I knew I wouldn't have much time," Romo said. "I heard a bang, and then saw the water rising quickly."
The high winds snapped a 206-foot Sitka spruce that had shared honors with one in Washington for the nation's largest. It had attracted 100,000 visitors a year.
People in the Midwest began bracing for the Northwest systems to move their way even as they dug out from a storm that hampered travel over the weekend. That system moved into the Northeast on Monday and has been blamed for more than 15 deaths, mostly in traffic accidents.
A weather-related pileup on New Jersey's route 3 killed two people, including Jennifer Alexander, a dancer for the American Ballet Theater, officials said.
School was canceled or classes delayed from New York to Maine as highways turned slippery and wind gusted to 40 mph. Ice storm warnings were issued for Massachusetts and Connecticut, and winter storm warnings were in effect in Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine and northern and western New York.
Still, the winter weather spelled success for ski areas in New England that suffered through an abysmal winter last year. In Vermont, 7 inches of snow welcomed skiers and snowboarders Monday morning.
"It's not snow. It's white gold," said Christopher Francis, innkeeper at Ye Olde England Inne, a 30-room establishment in the shadow of Stowe Mountain Resort.
December 4, 2007 at 05:11 am by Brian A Kennedy, 907 views, 11 comments
Crowd Power
First Flagged at 9:21 AM, Dec 4, 2007 by Xel-Ha
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cajunauzzie
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Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (11)
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DenisCarlat 07:24 on December 4th, 2007
The snow came early this season for people in Quebec and some people are not ready for it yet.
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Liemboat 08:27 on December 4th, 2007
Water pooled quickly under the SR522 overpass in Woodinville. Several people tried unsuccessfully to drive through it, including this pickup that had to be pulled out by a passing good samaritan.
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Xel-Haat 09:15 on December 4th, 2007
Walking to job @ Montreal downtown in the middle of the storm. More here (In spanish)
at 09:21 on December 4th, 2007
Brian A Kennedy, I like this story. It's good stuff.
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xinaprayat 09:35 on December 4th, 2007
The pic I just posted was taken on Saturday, during the snowfall. We had driving winds which fired huge, dense flakes almost horizontally at times. But it was worth being out there.
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greenwoman46at 09:39 on December 4th, 2007
Tacoma largely escaped major damage, but the skies told the story of what was happening to our neighbors to the north and south.
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trentfoleyat 10:08 on December 4th, 2007
This photo was taken Saturday afternoon just before the storm. Literally a minute after taking the shot, I got dumped on by the approaching rain cloud.
at 10:19 on December 4th, 2007
Thanks Brian, this is good stuff.
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skturbokittyat 11:24 on December 4th, 2007
Well, it was blustery. But we are from MI and we are used to snowy windy weather. It was actually quite beautiful because it was a wet, sticky snow that covered the trees and made everything white. Sometimes you just have to look for the beauty in things.
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greenhemat 14:53 on December 4th, 2007
This is the first 10 cm of the more than 30 cm of snow that fell in Montreal on Mon., December 3 '07. It looks calm here at 7 a.m., but it was falling steadily & the wind blowing hard.
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Jonathan Hanlon Photographyat 16:12 on December 4th, 2007
Our first snow of the season here in Seattle was a nice prequel to the nasty rain that washed it all away. Many places in the state are still underwater. Welcome to winter in the Northwest.