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    Helicopters rush food, water to cut-off Vt. towns

    NEWFANE, Vt. (AP) — National Guard helicopters rushed food and water Tuesday to a dozen cut-off Vermont towns after the rainy remnants of Hurricane Irene washed out roads and bridges in a deluge that took many people in the landlocked New England state by surprise.

    "As soon as we can get help, we need help," Liam McKinley said by cellphone from a mountain above flood-stricken Rochester, Vt.

    Up to 11 inches of rain from the weekend storm turned placid streams into churning, brown torrents that knocked homes off their foundations, flattened trees and took giant bites out of the asphalt across the countryside. At least three people died in Vermont.

    "I think that people are still a little shell-shocked right now. There's just a lot of disbelief on people's faces. It came through so quickly, and there's so much damage," Gail Devine, director of the Woodstock Recreation Center, said as volunteers moved furniture out of the flooded basement and shoveled out thick mud that filled the center's two swimming pools.

    As crews raced to repair the roads, the National Guard began flying in supplies to the towns of Cavendish, Granville, Hancock, Killington-Mendon, Marlboro, Pittsfield, Plymouth, Rochester, Stockbridge, Strafford, Stratton and Wardsboro. The Guard also used heavy-duty vehicles to bring relief to flood-stricken communities still reachable by road.

    The cut-off towns ranged in population from under 200 (Stratton) to nearly 1,400 (Cavendish).

    "If it's a life-and-death situation, where someone needs to be Medevac-ed or taken to a hospital, we would get a helicopter there to airlift them out, if we could get close to them. A lot of these areas are mountainous areas where there may not be a place to land," said Mark Bosma, a spokesman for Vermont Emergency Management.

    There were no immediate reports of anyone in dire condition being rescued by helicopter.

    But it took a relay operation involving two ambulances and an all-terrain vehicle to take a Killington woman in respiratory distress to a hospital in Rutland, about 13 miles away, after floodwaters severed the road between the two communities, Rutland Regional Medical Center President Tom Hubner said. The patient, whose name was not released, was doing fine, he said.

    In Rochester, where telephones were out and damage was severe, people could be seen from helicopters standing in line outside a grocery store. McKinley 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," he said.

    He said government agencies did a good job of warning people about the storm. "But here in Vermont, I think we just didn't expect it and didn't prepare for it," he said. "I thought, how could it happen here?"

    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."

    "Mac's opened up at 5 and gave perishables away to anyone who came," she added. "The Huntington House put on a big, free community dinner tonight."

    Access to Rochester and Stratton by road was restored later in the day, officials said.

    All together, the storm has been blamed for at least 44 deaths in 13 states. More than 2.5 million people from North Carolina to Maine were still without electricity Tuesday, three days after the hurricane churned up the Eastern Seaboard.

    While all eyes were on the coast as Irene swirled northward, some of the worst destruction took place well inland, away from the storm's most punishing winds. In Vermont, Gov. Peter Shumlin called it the worst flooding in a century. Small towns in upstate New York — especially in the Catskills and the Adirondacks — were also besieged by floodwaters.

    In Pittsfield, Vt., newlyweds Marc Leibowitz and Janina Stegmeyer of New York City were stranded Sunday along with members of the wedding party and dozens of their guests after floodwaters swamped the couple's honeymoon cottage. The honeymooners narrowly escaped in a four-wheel-drive rental car just before a bridge behind them collapsed.

    More than a dozen of the 60 or so guests were airlifted out by private helicopters on Tuesday.

    Michael Ricci of Woodstock, Vt., 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," he 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 the yard was almost up to the house, or about 15 to 20 feet above normal.

    He added: "The force of it was beyond our comprehension."

    Vermont emergency officials and the National Weather Service warned before the storm about the potential for heavy rain and flooding. On Thursday, Shumlin recommended stocking up on enough food, water and other supplies to last three days.

    On Tuesday, the governor defended his state's decision not to undertake extensive evacuations before the storm arrived, noting that it was too hard to predict which communities in a rugged place like Vermont would get hit.

    "You'd have to evacuate the entire state," he said.

    Gerald and Evangeline Monroe of Quechee, Vt., agreed with the governor and said they had no complaints about the way authorities handled the crisis.

    Gerald Monroe noted that some homes on one side of the river through his town were damaged, while those on the opposite banks 100 yards away were unscathed.

    His wife said city-dwellers may see a weather report and know it applies to their entire metropolitan area. "But when you live in Vermont, there are lots of little microclimates and every village is different." she said. "I think our authorities were fine."

    Approximately 260 roads in Vermont were closed because of storm damage, along with about 30 highway bridges. Vermont Deputy Transportation Secretary Sue Minter said the infrastructure damage was in the hundreds of millions of dollars.

    Relief supplies arrived at Vermont's National Guard headquarters early Tuesday in a convoy of 30 trucks from the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Accompanied by Shumlin, FEMA administrator Craig Fugate toured the state by helicopter Tuesday to survey the damage.

    Meanwhile, 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.

    Airlines said it would be days before the thousands of passengers stranded by Irene find their way home. Amtrak service was still out Tuesday between Philadelphia and New York because of flooding in Trenton. Commuter train service between New Jersey and New York City resumed Tuesday, except for one line that was still dealing with flooding.

    Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said at news conference in North Carolina that she was unaware of anything federal authorities should have done differently in Vermont. She said FEMA and its state counterpart worked closely together, and she noted that after the state agency operations center got flooded out, it moved into FEMA's quarters.

    William "Breck" Bowden, an expert on Vermont's watershed at the University of Vermont, attributed the disaster to a combination of factors: The soil was wet, Vermont's steep hills quickly fed the rainfall into streams, and the storm dumped a huge amount of water.

    "There was plenty of warning being given about the coming storm by the meteorological community and the news media," he said. "The real issues are the enormous damage to our infrastructure. That's nothing an evacuation could have done anything about."

    ___

    Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Holly Ramer in Woodstock, Vt., Wilson Ring and Dave Gram in Montpelier, and Michael Gormley in Albany, N.Y.

     
     
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    329 comments

    • Adam  •  8 mths ago
      I was actually down on Cape Cod in Massachusetts and they actually got some rain and alot of wind from that storm
    • smooth2ne1  •  8 mths ago
      The Government is air lifting .."Miss Butterworths'" in .....
    • michaels  •  8 mths ago
      Somalia came to help us?
    • Reality  •  8 mths ago
      No state can be any better than its leadership
    • TIM  •  8 mths ago
      Looks like Obama gonna git his bridge afta all.
    • 9 days to go  •  8 mths ago
      I just love the idiots trying to compare this little storm to Hugo and Katrina. That is like comparing a pee-shooter to a sherman tank. These big storms destroyed 100,000s of home and businesses and left millions without power for weeks, not days.
      • br 8 mths ago
        9 days til what? Your last brain cell carcs it?
      • Boothroyd 8 mths ago
        It's "pea shooter". Don't worry, though. It doesn't make you look like a douche, or anything like that.
    • Nan  •  8 mths ago
      Well what did people do in a disaster befor fema??? They helped them self people did not expect every one to pay a million dollars more in taxes just to help. Churches,neighbors,friends,family.. But big government that is a joke...........
      • Bodacious 8 mths ago
        So we should ground the helicopters and let the people die?
      • Nan 8 mths ago
        You really need to stop watching dumbo obama and do not take any more pay from him or the unions.. What is wrong with the state of vt doing some thing to help them..duhhh..
      • Ralph 8 mths ago
        They just had another name for it, perhaps several government agencies including the military. Back then we had troops and National Guard available to help. Nan is another person that looks at the past with rose colored glasses. I am 71 and believe me those good old days were not.

        Don't forget, when Katrina hit the Louisiana National Guard was in Iraq. For most states the National Guard was created to handle this sort of thing.
    • Denny  •  8 mths ago
      obama must help his voters there, the hell with everyone else!!!!!!!!!!!
      • Pol 8 mths ago
        Idiot Con!!!
      • Ralph 8 mths ago
        It will be perfect justice if you need and never get help from anyone, Denny. This may be the turning point. Hatred for Republican Congressman must be at an all time high now. Approval was only 13% before this bit of hostage holding on the part of the House Tea Party.
    • j bo  •  8 mths ago
      like i said we will see how much the tea party loves this country right know
      • Ralph 8 mths ago
        We know the answer to that. They love the Koch Brothers above all. They will not vote for aid to the flood victims without concessions to the Koch Brothers.
      • Tommy 8 mths ago
        Allegedly, the states hit by the flooding are all Democrat states, so they can sink or swim.
    • j bo  •  8 mths ago
      getting ready to see how much tea tea party cares bout there country know
    • Ed Bernat  •  8 mths ago
      geez who would expect that in vt.O well thats why I have a horse and always at least a years worth of nonperishables.
    • Pol  •  8 mths ago
      ObamaCARES, the government CARES, and the Cons complain. So typical of the heartless Cons!!!!
    • Mia  •  8 mths ago
      Glad to see we're taking care of our own.
    • A Yahoo User  •  8 mths ago
      I can't believe Eric Cantor is on TV saying that they won't help these people. He wants to take disaster funding away. Is this guy for real? If he lived there he would have a different opinion. He must be a sick person. He never says we should get out of the war to save money.
    • Dilligaf  •  8 mths ago
      Not much love for your fellow man being shown here...and for those of you who say "they should have been prepared"...tell me, how do you prepare for having your house pushed off it's foundation or for having coffins washed out of the ground? I've seen animals show more compassion than many of you...
    • Gail  •  8 mths ago
      TO "BODACIOUS" ..........and TO "LYNNE".....

      1. "yet Ron Paul wants to shut FEMA down"......well, that's because Ron Paul is a libertarian/Republican radical.

      2. " these people wasn't from the 9th ward".... has nothing to do with the different situations. What DOES make the difference is that the Bush administration clearly didn't care enough about the common and poorer people - to get the emergency aid going soon enough.

      Obama DOES care, and is showing his competence in getting the aid processes going quickly.
    • crow  •  8 mths ago
      how come nobody is shooting at the helicopters,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, oh wait , that was down south , nevermind.
    • Vincit Omnia Veritas  •  8 mths ago
      If this were New Orleans, there wouldn't be a nice neat line. That store and the nearest walmart would've been looted for Colt 45 and big screen TV's. Then they would've complained about the gov. not doing enough for them.
    • 9 days to go  •  8 mths ago
      FrankB, What do you mean the did not expect 11 inches of rain? This storm was front page news for over a week and these people had at least 3 1/2 days to prepare or leave. Why is it that only VT. is now in the news when it started in NC. I know the roads up there are not that great but hell, you can drive to chicago from there in 2 days or less.
    • Diolu mikael Miagao  •  8 mths ago
      Hello to all.....................^_^
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