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    East Coast feels Irene's after effects

    NEWFANE, Vt. (AP) — As emergency airlift operations brought ready-to-eat meals and water to Vermont residents left isolated and desperate, states along the Eastern Seaboard continued to be battered Tuesday by the after effects of Irene, the destructive hurricane turned tropical storm.

    Dangerously-damaged infrastructure, 2.5 million people without power and thousands of water-logged homes and businesses continued to overshadow the lives of residents and officials from North Carolina through New England, where the storm has been blamed for at least 44 deaths in 13 states.

    But new dangers developed in New Jersey and Connecticut, where once benign rivers rose menacingly high. New Jersey ordered new evacuations.

    The Passaic River in northeastern New Jersey crested — causing extensive flooding along its course and forcing a round of evacuations and rescues in Paterson, the state's third-largest city.

    "Been in Paterson all my life, I'm 62 years old, and I've never seen anything like this," said resident Gloria Moses as she gathered with others at the edge of what used to be a network of streets, now covered by a lake.

    Flooding continued to besiege Paterson, Little Falls and Montville Township on Wednesday morning, even after the state's rain-swollen rivers crested and slowly receded.

    Gov. Chris Christie, after touring Wayne, through which the Passaic also flows, said Tuesday night that he saw "just extraordinary despair."

    He said inland flooding would probably continue another 48 hours and additional shelters were still being opened.

    In Connecticut, the Connecticut River was 23 feet above flood stage on Tuesday afternoon and still rising.

    Gov. Dannel P. Malloy toured hard-hit coastal areas — including a peninsula in Fairfield that was lined with heavily damaged homes on Long Island Sound.

    Communities on the East Coast continued recovery efforts Tuesday, with people moving out of emergency shelters in western Massachusetts, farmers in New York's battered Schoharie Valley assessing crop losses and an insurance agent in Pawtucket, R.I., fielding dozens of calls from customers making damage claims.

    "The majority of the claims are trees down," said Melanie Loiselle-Mongeon. "Trees on houses, on fences, on decks, on cars."

    In Vermont, officials focused on providing basic necessities to residents who in many cases still have no power, no telephone service and no way to get in or out of their towns.

    On Tuesday night, 11 towns — Cavendish, Granville, Hancock, Killington, Mendon, Marlboro, Pittsfield, Plymouth, Stockbridge, Strafford and Wardsboro — were cut off from the outside.

    But by Wednesday morning, all but one of the communities — Wardsboro— had been reached by ground crews, emergency management officials said.

    And it's hoped that Wardsboro can be reached Wednesday morning, said Emergency Management spokesman Robert Stirewalt

    He said the crude roads are not for general use and are only passable by emergency vehicles.

    Vermont National Guard choppers made three drops in Killington-Mendon, Pittsfield and Rochester Tuesday while 10 other towns received truck deliveries of food, blankets, tarps and water.

    Eight Black Hawk and Chinook helicopters from the Illinois National Guard are expected to arrive Wednesday to bolster the number of flights.

    Federal Emergency Management Agency administrator Craig Fugate told CBS's "The Early Show" a drawdown in assistance funds will have no negative impact on the agency's efforts to help stricken Eastern Seaboard states. The agency has less than $800 million left in its disaster coffers.

    "We're going to do what we're supposed to do," he said in the interview Wednesday morning.

    "We start with lifesaving and look at the critical needs, the power outages and recovery. We are still in very much a rescue operation. Yesterday, still, rescue operations were going on here in New York."

    Fugate said FEMA's current focus is on Hurricane Irene recovery efforts and said it must also gird for any new disasters.

    "We don't know what's coming down the line," he said.

    Up to 11 inches of rain triggered the deluges, which knocked houses off their foundations, destroyed covered bridges and caused earthquake-style damage to infrastructure all over the state. Three people were killed and a fourth is still missing.

    About 260 roads in Vermont were closed because of storm damage, along with about 30 highway bridges. Only a handful of them have been reopened.

    Vermont Deputy Transportation Secretary Sue Minter said the infrastructure damage was in the hundreds of millions of dollars.

    Residents trapped in inaccessible communities used cellphones and computers to reach out to others.

    "As soon as we can get help, we need help," resident Liam McKinley said by cellphone from a mountain above flood-stricken Rochester on Tuesday. He said the town's restaurants and a supermarket were giving food away rather than let it spoil, and townspeople were helping each other.

    "We've been fine so far. The worst part is not being able to communicate with the rest of the state and know when people are coming in," McKinley said.

    Wendy Pratt, another of the few townspeople able to communicate with the outside world, posted an update on Facebook using a generator and a satellite Internet connection. She sketched a picture of both devastation and New England neighborliness.

    "People have lost their homes, their belongings, businesses ... the cemetery was flooded and caskets were lost down the river. So many areas of complete devastation," Pratt wrote. "In town there is no cell service or internet service - all phones in town are out. We had a big town meeting at the church at 4 this afternoon to get any updates."

    In Woodstock, Vt., Michael Ricci spent the day clearing debris from his backyard along the Ottauquechee River. What had been a meticulously mowed, sloping grass lawn and gorgeous flower beds was now a muddy expanse littered with debris, including wooden boards, propane tanks and a deer hunting target.

    "The things we saw go down the river were just incredible," Ricci said. "Sheds, picnic tables, propane tanks, furnaces, refrigerators. We weren't prepared for that. We had prepared for wind and what we ended up with was more water than I could possibly, possibly have imagined." He said the water in his yard was almost up to the house, or about 15 to 20 feet above normal.

    Volunteers in Windham, N.Y., helped 26-year-old Antonia Schreiber salvage the floors of the 200-year-old Victorian cottage she had transformed into a luxury day spa.

    The ski town, high in the Catskill Mountains, was left under several feet of brick-red water Sunday night after a stony creek, the Batavia Kill, grew to a raging river fueled by a foot of rain.

    "Friends, loved ones, people I don't even know showed up with trucks, bulldozers and hugs," she said as men and women scraped and mopped around her. "The magnitude of generosity and good will is just overwhelming."

    While East Coast residents measured the cost of the storm in waterlogged cars and ruined furniture, official predictions were more dire.

    In North Carolina, where Irene blew ashore along the Outer Banks on Saturday before heading for New York and New England, Gov. Beverly Perdue said the hurricane destroyed more than 1,100 homes and caused at least $70 million in damage.

    New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who is sending a list of Irene-related costs in an attempt to speed the federal government's declaration of a major disaster, said the list already exceeds the $25 million threshold for aid to governments, businesses, farmers and residents.

    Malloy, the Connecticut governor, said it was unclear how many millions of dollars in damage the storm had caused. He said he is pressing federal officials to help tally the toll on the state's infrastructure.

    Total losses from the storm along the U.S. Atlantic Coast — including damage and expenses incurred by governments — are likely to be about $7 billion, according to Jan Vermeiren, CEO of Silver Spring, Md.-based risk consultant Kinetic Analysis Corp., which uses computer models to estimate storm losses.

    Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano and Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator Craig Fugate will tour New York and New Jersey Wednesday to view the damage firsthand. Trips to other states affected by the storm are being planned.

    ___

    Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Holly Ramer in Woodstock, Vt., Lisa Rathke, Wilson Ring and Dave Gram in Montpelier, David Porter and Samantha Henry in Lodi, N.J., Stephen Dockery in Fairfield, Conn., David Klepper and Laura Crimaldi in Providence, R.I., and Michael Gormley in Albany, N.Y.

     

    154 comments

    • Drew  •  8 mths ago
      Theresa Drew My love and prayers go out to all during this time of need.When l see all the hapenings in my home state "Vermont" and all other.
    • Ssenabulya Steven  •  8 mths ago
      we do handle all that sturf 2 GOD.
    • WE SOCIETY  •  8 mths ago
      You can't deliver that food unless we have off setting food elswhere.Eric cantor
    • CantBLieveThisInCT  •  8 mths ago
      To Steven, J.P.: So where do you suggest everyone go? Upstate NY, where the same thing is happening? Canada? New Hampshire? Air bus everyone in New England to Nevada? The problem that was unforeseen was the rising of minor brooks and tributaries that had little history of flooding. For those that haven't spent any time in New England, VT, NH and upstate NY are riddled with those.
    • Takeitorleaveit  •  8 mths ago
      Interesting comments. The state that has received the most federal dollars in disaster relief. And the winner, is Texas. The top ten list included 8 of ten southern states. The last flood of this size in Vermont was over 100 years ago. Yet you have no problem taking my money for tornado victums who keep building homes where tornadoes strike every few years, people who keep building on fault lines in California, people in Florida and the gulf who are subject to hurricaine damage almost every year in some part of their state, it happens here once and we're a bunch of dumb liberals. Please if that is how you truly feel then don't take my money for damages that happen to you far more frequently then they happen to me and/or give back all the money you have taken over the last 50 years for not learning not to keep building in tornado ally and on fault lines that have earth quakes more frequently then we have floods. ridiculous self absorbed SOB's.
    • clarence  •  8 mths ago
      Where is Obama? Why isn't Obama helping these people? It has been 4 days since the storm hit.
    • J.P.  •  8 mths ago
      I'm sure that obama has all under control. I was north of the lake when Katrina hit and I evacuated like I should have. I did not need to be rescued CAUSE I LEFT TOWN. It's what you do when a major storm is bearing down on you. Did obama not tell you'll that?? to all those yanks that made those stupid southerner remarks, payback is a &^$@# ain't it. on the other hand i do feel sorry for all those that are suffering losses. but you still have the same federal fema to deal with. our problem was a stupid democratic gov. that told President Bush she had all under control, states rights and all that crap!!! and take a look back at the NO Cops looting along with all the other fine citizens, priceless.
    • JJ  •  8 mths ago
      VERMONT WANTED TO KEEP IT NATURAL, KEEP IT REAL, so why am I asked to pay for Damage they created?
      • Takeitorleaveit 8 mths ago
        Because we pay for people damaged by tornados that keep happening in the midwest and keep living in the same place, for people who keep building on fault lines in California, for hurricaines that hit the gulf states and southern states every 10 years or so. This our first time in one hundred years. Don't give us money just don't ask any more from us when it happens else where. Texas get the most disaster relief money. Gooogle it on line.
      • CantBLieveThisInCT 8 mths ago
        What is that supposed to mean? They created a flood?
      • WE SOCIETY 8 mths ago
        ME society is a failure
    • Steven  •  8 mths ago
      Somebody said the people of Vermont did not know the storm was coming and they were totally caught by surprise and they couldn't leave bc of the mountainous region.
      Now the whole nation watched the storm go up the coast from Virginia on up and how do you not anticipate the storm coming your way if you live up there?
      • anonymous 8 mths ago
        They are landlocked. This was a coastal storm. What could they have done to stop 11 inches of rain from falling? Should the residents have gone out and braced their bridges and roadways, maybe anchored all their trees. There is no way to thoroughly prepare for that type of disaster. They weren't even in the direct path of the storm for crying out loud!
      • WE SOCIETY 8 mths ago
        Maybe you can see the future but who knew 8" of rain would fall in a couple hours.Revaling in others misfortune is supremely inhuman.
    • JJ  •  8 mths ago
      Why isn't obama stopping the flooding, why is he doing this?
    • NY2VA11412  •  8 mths ago
      Oh, come on, people! Glenn Beck says that this hurricaine is the best thing that's happened to us in a long time...probably since Katrina! Hey, doesn't he speak for every republican out there? We hear ya, you betcha!
      • Phyl 8 mths ago
        And bachmann thinks god told her he was cleaning up. Real winners!
      • CantBLieveThisInCT 8 mths ago
        No, he doesn't. Believe it or not, there are a large # of repubs who are repulsed by Beck, Rush, Fox, Palin, etc. We're all the ones turning Indy as the loud mouths try to dis-enfranchise us.
    • Nick  •  8 mths ago
      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FdfEXzMLGdc
    • gramie  •  8 mths ago
      My heart breaks for all the people that have been affected by the hurricane. We all need to do what we can to help. Prayers being said for all in need.
    • Alyson Brignac  •  8 mths ago
      Welcome to my world . . . (I am a Native New Orleanian). I have survived countless hurricanes . . . for one reason . . . PREPAREDNESS (and an aversion to stupid choices).
      • Phyl 8 mths ago
        And your point is???
    • Mad at Pats  •  8 mths ago
      But I thought Hurricane Irene was a non-event. The New York City media told me so.
    • PHILA. FREEDOM  •  8 mths ago
      Notice the Administration has only declared a state of emergency in those states with DEMOCRATIC Governors? What about Virginia and New Jersey?
    • US CITIZEN  •  8 mths ago
      this goes to show you -- when you know bad weather is approaching ---- BE PREPARED!
      stock up on supplies and food or leave the area!
    • A Yahoo! User  •  8 mths ago
      Hey no one was shooting at the relief helicopters like they did after Katrina? Amazing. Thank you to all relief workers everywhere for all that you do! As you can see now, there are plenty of people here in America who appreciate your help!
    • Mark  •  8 mths ago
      now the ppl of the north and northeast have gotten a taste of what the ppl of the gulf coast endure. men get a spine, grow a pair and suck it up, ladies; put your big girls panties on and deal with it.
    • xibit  •  8 mths ago
      If you have had roof, and home damage, get the right help below.

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xlIPVGGRaA8
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