WoT Homeland Security Advises "Bracing for A Northern Punch"

Ranger Rainier

Inactive
Bracing for a Northern Punch
by Liza Porteus Viana
Saturday, 31 May 2008
http://hstoday.us/content/view/3514/27/1/1/

Florida and the Gulf coast usually bear the brunt of Mother Nature but sometimes she can lash out in unexpected directions.
Should a Category 3 hurricane hit New York City, 100 to 150 mph winds would turn Times Square into a war zone—anything not tied down would turn into a weapon. High winds would create a vacuum effect throughout the streets, windows in the Empire State Building and other high-rises would explode and shatter, sending razor-sharp debris raining onto the streets and anyone passing by. Storm surges would overtake Coney Island, and “America’s Playground” would be largely under water. The Hudson River could cause flooding all the way up to 14th Street, and subway tunnels would be flooded with damaging salt water. Little Italy, Chinatown, Wall Street and other downtown areas would be devastated.
All that combined, according to The Weather Channel experts, such a storm could surpass Hurricane Katrina as the largest natural disaster ever to hit the United States. In fact, New York City has been named the third most vulnerable city in the entire nation to hurricane hazards—following only Miami and New Orleans.

Many weather experts think this region is due for a whopper of a storm, although there’s nothing on the radar so far that indicates this will be the year it happens.

“It’s like a baseball player when baseball season’s starting—if they haven’t had a hit 15 times at bat, it’s time for a hit. It’s the same thing for hurricanes. … We really haven’t had a major hurricane in New York since 1938,” said Tom Downs, director of Expert Weather Investigations. “I remember my mother always remembering that and insisting there was a big hurricane here because the wind was strong,” and that was only on the tip of Long Island, he continued. “If they thought that was bad … then wait until a big storm comes.”

“It’s an important thing for people to realize—although hurricanes are quite infrequent, they have catastrophic consequences” in the New York-New Jersey region, said Nicholas Coch, a professor at Queens College and an expert on northern hurricanes. “A Category 3 up here is the equivalent of a 4 in the South.”

That’s because northern hurricanes move twice as fast as southern ones once they pass Georgia. Winds on the east side of the storm are accentuated as they move over water—and the winds are moving so fast that the colder northern waters don’t offer any protection. The physical geographical intersection of New York and New Jersey pushes all of the water from the continental shelf into a deadly right angle. “This is the absolutely, positively worst place for a Category 3 to make a strike in terms of storm surge,” Coch said.

If such a storm ever hits this area, protecting the 8 million people living in New York City and its five burroughs would prove to be the biggest challenge. Authorities’ first priority would be to evacuate the estimated 3.3 million living in low-lying or otherwise vulnerable areas. Those who can’t fit into the city’s shelters would have to fend for themselves.

Historical perspective
The last Category 3 storm to hit the New York area was the “Long Island Express.” The storm moved northwest from the tropical Atlantic and made landfall as a Category 3 hurricane, moving 60 to 70 mph over Long Island and Connecticut on Sept. 21, 1938. Some Long Islanders thought they were seeing a fog bank—in fact, it was a 30-foot storm surge. Blue Hill Observatory in Massachusetts measured sustained winds of 121 mph with gusts to 183 mph. Storm surges of 10 to 12 feet inundated portions of the coast from Long Island and Connecticut eastward to southeastern Massachusetts. Heavy rains produced river flooding, most notably along the Connecticut River. That storm struck with little warning and was responsible for 600 deaths and $308 million in damage.

Hurricane Belle, a Category 1 storm, hit western Long Island in August of 1976before moving northeast and losing its tropical character over New England. It inflicted $100 million in damage. Hurricane Gloria first passed over Cape Hatteras, NC, on Sept. 27, 1985, as a Category 3 storm. Moving at more than 30 mph, it made landfall again over southern Long Island as a Category 2. Economic losses were estimated at $900 million. It was the 13th costliest and the 16th most intense hurricane at the time to make US landfall in the 20th century.

North Carolina bears the brunt of most storms coming north along the coast, but if a system makes it as far north as New York, Long Island usually shoulders most of the impact. Manhattan proper is a little more protected because it’s tucked away from the ocean’s direct coast.

As long as the right side of a hurricane faces away from Manhattan, the threat of serious catastrophic damage is lessened. But if a hurricane were to move northwest from the Atlantic Ocean into the New Jersey coast and directly hit the area of Long Branch, NJ, or Asbury Park, NJ, massive flooding would occur. More often than not, people don’t anticipate the resulting storm surges, but they can be deadly.

“The worst-case scenario for New York City is for the center of the hurricane to go over Monmouth County, New Jersey, because that puts the right side right over us—the right side is the killer side,” Coch said. A Category 3 storm moving in this path would “pretty much be moving a lot of the Atlantic Ocean onto land … anything below Canal Street would be under water,” he added.

Most hurricanes do not move in that path. But climatologists and emergency response officials at all levels are still making sure they are prepared.

Plan and prepare
In 2008, the Atlantic Basin will see 13 named storms before hurricane season is over, according to closely followed predictions from Colorado State University’s Philip Klotzbach and William Gray released in December. The basin will experience seven hurricanes, three of them intense, according to the predictions. There is a 37 percent chance a Category 3, 4 or 5 hurricane could make landfall along the East Coast, including peninsular Florida; the average for last century was 31 percent. In comparison, there’s a 36 percent chance a storm that strong could land along the Gulf coast.

Hurricane Katrina caused many cities and regions to re-evaluate their own preparedness and evacuation plans. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg in June 2006 unveiled the Big Apple’s emergency Coastal Storm Plan, which is updated every year. A team of more than 30,000 volunteers would man shelters that could hold 600,000 of the estimated 3.3 million people who may have to be evacuated from the most vulnerable, low-lying areas.

“It’s a plan that can be scaled, depending on the storm, but it’s a worst-case scenario of a Category 4 hitting New York City,” NYC Office of Emergency Management (OEM) Deputy Press Secretary Chris Gilbride told HSToday.

As for whether New Yorkers are mentally ready for such a disaster, Gilbride said recent polling by the city shows people are becoming more prepared, “but there’s still a long way to go.”

Another lesson from Katrina is that the disabled cannot fend for themselves. New Jersey is working with its 21 counties and 500-plus municipalities on an inter-connected database that includes information on special-needs residents—whether they are elderly, have disabilities or are in need of other assistance—so they can be located and evacuated during an emergency. Shelters would be set up throughout local areas, as well.

There’s little question most New York and New Jersey residents are simply not in the hurricane-preparedness mindset, despite the warnings from weather experts that Mother Nature can’t be taken for granted. After all, they think: “We’ve survived terror attacks and blackouts. What’s a little storm with high winds, right?” Wrong, experts say. Denial can be dangerous in the face of a major storm.

“In Florida if someone says ‘hurricane,’ the first question is: ‘How much gas is in the car?’ In New York, it’s: ‘How much ice is in the freezer for a hurricane party?’” Coch said. “New Yorkers are tough people—they’re as tough as the rock they stand on—they’re just not going to believe anything’s going to happen to them. They think they’re Job in the Bible.” HST

One critical element—another Katrina lesson learned—is for industry to be on the same page as local officials regarding actions that need to be taken in the event of a hurricane. “It’s a critical role to be in lockstep with the local agencies and law enforcement because that got tense,” Francis said of the 2005 southern storm. “During a disaster, the one thing you can’t preplan for is if people become agitated.”


Is this like Hospitals in Israel should be prepared for an earthquake?
The North should be prepared for a Hurricane? Go figure.....
 

tanstaafl

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I don't have any links and I can't remember the tv show, but I seem to recall that New York City has been hit with more hurricanes than Savannah, Georgia.
 

Hansa44

Justine Case
Interesting post and why would homeland security be issuing the possibility and warning? Would it have anything to do with all the weather manipulation going on? Something they might know and we don't? I'm a very suspicious person where the government is concerned.:whistle:
 

tanstaafl

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Because FEMA is in the Department of Homeland Security, and because bureaucrat managers just love to take credit for someone else's work?
 

Moggy

Inactive
Hurricanes are not unusual in the northeast. I remember these two:
1955 Hurricanes Connie and Diane, on Aug.12-13 and Aug. 18-19, respectively, dumped heavy rain on the northern half of New Jersey. Record flooding occurred along the Delaware River. As to NYC, a slew of them have caused major damage on Long Island and here are two storms that have struck the Big Apple in the past:

August 28, 1971 — Tropical Storm Doria produces up to 8 inches (200 mm) of rain in New York City and Upstate New York causing moderate to severe flooding and floods subways in New York City.

June 22, 1972 — Hurricane Agnes makes landfall near New York City and produces up to 12 inches (300 mm) of rain in Southeastern New York State and much of Western New York, with locally higher amounts. Storm tides of 3.1 feet (1 m) and wind gusts of 55 miles per hour (89 km/h) occur in New York City, and severe river flooding causes six deaths.

See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_New_York_hurricanes

Moggy
 

night driver

ESFP adrift in INTJ sea
Another lesson from Katrina is that the disabled cannot fend for themselves. New Jersey is working with its 21 counties and 500-plus municipalities on an inter-connected database that includes information on special-needs residents—whether they are elderly, have disabilities or are in need of other assistance—so they can be located and evacuated during an emergency. Shelters would be set up throughout local areas, as well.

And THIS is why they are asking about disabled folk in LOTS of areas.

Disabled require special features in shelters, in evac, and to return home.
 

Palmetto

Son, Husband, Father
Maybe this is the "suffering" and the "winds" that the Bots were predicting.

The effect on lives, property, and the economy would be dev....

P
 

yinonyavo

Contributing Member
pardon the cynicism, but anything that would clean new york would be considered good in my book. I still don't understand why we must be considerate of people who opt to live in disaster areas and urban areas. these are their choices. never live downstream because people upstream are always pissing in the river. fact of life. We are americans who have endured calamity and disaster, and always fought back because it is part of our psyche. thats the way things happen moving west.
 

Double_A

TB Fanatic
pardon the cynicism, but anything that would clean new york would be considered good in my book. I still don't understand why we must be considerate of people who opt to live in disaster areas and urban areas. these are their choices. never live downstream because people upstream are always pissing in the river. fact of life. We are americans who have endured calamity and disaster, and always fought back because it is part of our psyche. thats the way things happen moving west.

Let me say a couple things here.

1) The majority of the worlds population lives near the ocean or along waterways.

2) Nearly ever portion of the Country has some local Natural or Weather related potential for disaster.

3) People here just LOVE to slam my state, they jump on the chance to talk crap about it. (I'm certain that having said that somebody will make some kind of remark confirming what I've just said.) But, I don't talk crap about other states because it splits people apart when we all need to pull together. The citizens of the United States must act in a united manner.
 

ceeblue

Inactive
Rant on. It ain't going to be a war zone. It may be a hurricane zone. Weather, earthquakes and volcanos are not war events. They are weather and geologic events.

I'm just sick of all this misuse of the word war and the phrase ground zero. Those words mean something and their misuse is just stupid and irritating. Rant off.
 
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