FRANKEN STORM SANDY
Tanker washed up, homes razed to the ground and flooded streets littered with cars: Obama declares a 'major disaster' after Sandy turns New York into apocalyptic scene and death toll jumps to 33
The scale of the devastation left by Superstorm Sandy is mounting today as the death toll continues to rise - currently 33 people across the US and Canada have been reported dead, but the final figure is expected to be significantly higher.President Obama declared a 'major disaster' in New York and Long Island as flooded streets were littered with cars, homes were razed to the ground and tankers washed up on shoreHundreds of thousands of people are without power in New York and the transit system, schools, the stock exchange and Broadway are all out of action after a 13ft wall of water caused by the storm surge and high tides brought severe flooding to subways and road tunnels.Sandy, one of the biggest storms to ever descend on the country, hit the mainland at 6.30pm local time yesterday having laid waste to large parts of the coast during the day.The storm that made landfall in New Jersey yesterday evening with 80 mph sustained winds, cut power to more than 7.4 million homes and businesses from the Carolinas to Ohio, caused scares at two nuclear power plants and stopped the presidential campaign cold.New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg says the death toll in the America's most populous city is up to 10 - two children who were killed instantly in the city by a falling tree.Nearly 200 firefighters spent the night battling to get a blaze under control in the Queens, but over 80 homes were flattened in the fire.After the storm: True scale of Sandy's devastation across Eastern Seabord emerges as death toll hits FIFTY and damage set to top $50BILLION
As the superstorm passed over the region, startling before-and-after pictures revealed what was left of the East Coast. At first glance, New Jersey's Mantoloking Bridge appeared to be completely different highways - until it becomes clear that just one solitary house was left standing.
Before the storm: The horizon over the Mantoloking Bridge was once dotted with row after row of Atlantic vacation homes
Razed: Now the horizon in New Jersey is entirely altered following the devastating superstorm Sandy
Chewed up: Atlantic City is almost unrecognisable because of the damage that Sandy has caused. The total estimated cost of repairs following the storm is $20billion
Aftermath: Resident Kim Johnson inspects the area around her apartment building which flooded and destroyed large sections of an old boardwalk Row after row of Atlantic vacation homes on the horizon were wiped out by the 900-mile storm following surging waters and winds which reached peaks of 95mph. The colossal scale of the devastation was mounting today as the death toll continued to rise - 50 people were dead in the wake of the storm but that number was expected to grow as rescue missions and clear-up continued. The cost was originally estimated at around $20billion but financial forecasters now expected it somewhere between $30 - $50billion of damage.
Stark: Foundations and pilings are all that remain of brick buildings and a boardwalk in Atlantic City, New Jersey
Smashed: A street sign stands near apartment buildings and destroyed large sections of the historic boardwalk
View from the sky: Video taken from a helicopter shows the devastation along Jersey Shore Sandy will likely be among the ten costliest hurricanes in U.S. history. It would still be far below the worst - Hurricane Katrina, which cost $108 billion in 2005. Insured losses were expected to reach up to $15billion, according to NBC, before the additional toll of the damage done to uninsured buildings and infrastructure such as roads, bridges and transport systems. However experts said a slightly slower economy in the coming weeks will likely be matched by reconstruction and repairs that will contribute to growth over time.
Eye of the storm: New York was among the hardest hit by Superstorm Sandy. A fire broke out in Breezy Point, Queens, destroying between 80 and 100 houses
Battle: More than 190 firefighters have contained the six-alarm blaze fire in the Breezy Point section, but they are still putting out some pockets of fire
Washed up: A resident pushes a bicycle down a street covered in beach sand due to flooding from Superstorm Sandy in Long Beach, New York
Destruction: Cars floating after being pushed out a flooded basement in the city during last night's battering
Beached: A 168-foot water tanker, the John B. Caddell, sits on the shore where it ran aground on Front Street in the Stapleton neighborhood of New York's Staten Island
Fleet in the floods: Yellow cabs in a parking lot are surrounded by water after Superstorm Sandy struck Hoboken, New Jersey
Trashed: Cars float up from a car garage in a mixture of floodwater and gasoline in lower Manhattan as workers begin the process of pumping out the mess Some of those losses won't be easily made up. Restaurants that lose two or three days of business, for example, won't necessarily experience a rebound later. And money spent to repair a home may lead to less spending elsewhere. The storm cut power to more than eight million homes and shut down 70 per cent of East Coast oil refineries. It inflicted worse-than-expected damage in the New York metro area - which produces about 10 per cent of economic output in the U.S. President Obama, who will visit New Jersey tomorrow, declared the storm as a 'major disaster' as submerged streets were littered with debris and downed power lines, homes were razed and a tanker had washed ashore.
Wrecked: A man looks at an uprooted tree which fell on a car when Superstorm Sandy swept through the Brooklyn borough of New York
A firefighter leaves a destroyed home in Pasadena, Maryland, where the homeowner was killed overnight when a tree fell on his home during superstorm Sandy
Battered: This home in Manalapan, Florida, was ripped up and ravaged by Sandy when the storm passed through
Ripped out: A tree rests on Mike and Kelle Barry's home in Annapolis, Maryland as Superstorm Sandy ripped through the East Coast Mantoloking Bridge leads to the Jersey Shore village of Brick Township, home to more than 76,100 people. Dozens of people have been rescued from roofs of properties where areas were flooded with at least 6ft of seawater. President Obama will join New Jersey Governor Chris Christie on Wednesday for a helicopter tour of the ravaged state. At press conference on Tuesday night at 7.30pm (EST) Governor Christie said: 'It was an overwhelming afternoon for me - very emotional for a boy who was brought up in this state.'
Understatement: A Whole Foods store in New York informs its customers that it is closed 'due to inclement weather'
Two women shop for groceries by torchlight in the Tribeca neighbourhood of New York after power outages caused large parts of the city to fall into darkness
Dangerous: A cordon is put up around scaffolding which collapsed in New York after Superstorm Sandy caused widespread damage in the city
Barrier: Water and debris block a section of South Street in lower Manhattan, in New York, which had been in the storm's path
Toppled: Pictures from Washington DC show how the wind has grabbed hold of trees and ripped them out by the trunk (above and below)
Crushed: This home on the Florida coast is surveyed by two men astonished by the scale of destruction Sandy has left
Powerful: Waves pound a lighthouse on the shores of Lake Erie, near Cleveland, Ohio on Tuesday SANDY TAKES THE LIVES OF 50At least 50 people have died in the devastation wreaked by Superstorm Sandy - including two children killed instantly by a falling tree. The children - named locally as Jack Baumler, 11, and Michael Robson, 13 - were crushed by the toppled tree as they played inside their home in Westchester County, New York state, at 6.45pm on Monday. Other fatalities include a woman who was electrocuted to death by falling wires on Manhattan’s 134th Street and a 29-year-old man who was killed in a car crash in Queens. A man was crushed by a falling tree in Ulster County, New York State, and one death has been reported in Connecticut and two people were killed when their pick-up was crushed by a falling tree in New Jersey. Police in Toronto said a woman was killed by a falling sign as high winds closed in on Canada's largest city. A 30-year-old man was killed when a tree fell on his house on 166th Street in Flushing, New York City. Meanwhile a 62-year-old man was killed as he let his dog out on his porch in Oley, Pennsylvania. An eight-year-old boy died when he was crushed by a falling tree in Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania. And a jogger was reportedly hospitalised after being crushed by a falling tree in Brooklyn’s Prospect Park. He pledged to rebuild the Jersey Shore but said that a lot of it had been washed into the sea. Christie confirmed that six had died in the state and told residents of the Garden State to 'hang in'. He added that he didn't want to guess the cost of the damage but believed it would run into billions. New Jersey's barrier islands were hit directly as Sandy made landfall on Monday night and were left with colossal damage due to their exposed location on the open ocean. The gambling mecca of Atlantic City was battered by the storm with the historic boardwalk left in splinters after it was smashed by waves and torn up by the wind. The city's mayor Lorenzo Langford was denounced by Governor Christie after he advised people not to evacuate and 500 had remained in flimsy shelters, only a block from the beach. Christie said on Monday that the decision was 'stupid and selfish’ because the precarious location of Atlantic City would place rescue workers in danger. He said: 'I feel badly for the folks in Atlantic City who listened to him and sheltered in Atlantic City, and I guess my anger has turned to sympathy for those folks, and we’re in the midst now of trying to go in and save them.' The Jersey Shore appeared completely flattened in the before-and-after shots. And in Hoboken, an entire fleet of New York city's iconic yellow cabs were almost entirely submerged by flood waters. Around 120 miles to the south-west, New York City had its own pictorial record of the devastation. A ferocious fire in Breezy Point, Queens, destroyed 111 homes. The New York Fire Department battled to save houses in a neighborhood that is home to hundreds of their fellow firefighters, plunging into neck-deep water and fighting winds to reach the raging inferno. In Dumbo, Brooklyn, the painstakingly restored Jane's Carousel, which is a popular tourist attraction in the area, was badly damaged by flood waters and cut off on its own little island in Brooklyn Bridge Park. Sandy, one of the biggest storms ever to hit the United States, roared ashore with fierce winds and heavy rain on Monday at 8pm (EST) and forced evacuations, shut down transport and interrupted the New York City was all but closed off by car, train and air. The superstorm overflowed the city's waterfront, flooded the financial district, subway tunnels and cut power to hundreds of thousands. Power is expected to be fully restored in Manhattan and Brooklyn within four days. The New York Stock Exchange will reopen for regular trading on Wednesday after being shut down for two days. Most homeowners who suffered losses from flooding won't be able to benefit from their insurance policies.
Broken home: A man and child look in disbelief at a collapsed house in the Cosey Beach neighborhood of East Haven, Connecticut
Aftermath: A rainbow and looming clouds appear over the sky in New York's Manhattan after the hurricane stormed the city
Damaged: A building that had its facade ripped off by Hurricane Sandy - beds and radiators can be seen in the block
Wrecked: A construction site sinks into a large hole on South Street Seaport - the clean-up operation is expected to cost over £12 billion
Deluge: Water floods over the barriers in New York. The city's transit system, schools, the stock exchange and Broadway were also shut after a 13ft wall of water caused by the storm surge and high tides brought severe flooding to subways and road tunnels
Transformation: A subway station now resembles a river in one of the US's largest cities
Submerged: The lobby of Verizon's Corporate headquarters in Manhattan. The headquarter houses executive offices as well as some of the company's key telecom equipment that supports services to New York's financial district
Operation clean-up: Debris litters a flooded street in the Dumbo section of Brooklyn after the city awakens to the affects of Hurricane Sandy Standard homeowner policies don't cover flood damage, and few homeowners have flood insurance. But Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac said they will offer help to borrowers whose homes were damaged or destroyed, who live in designated disaster areas and whose loans the mortgage giants own or guarantee. Among other steps, mortgage servicers will be allowed to reduce the monthly payments of affected homeowners or require no payments from them temporarily.
Rubble: People in Atlantic City view the area where a 2000-foot section of the 'uptown' boardwalk was destroyed by flooding
Sand and debris cover a part of town near the ocean in New Jersey after serious flooding ravaged the coastline
Chaos: A boat moved by gushing waters rests on the tracks at Metro-North's Ossining Station on the Hudson Line
Sweep up: Workers clean up sheets of blown-out glass in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy - many store faces took a beating from the strong winds
Challenge: Firefighters tackle a blaze in the Breezy Point section of the Queens borough of New York, in which more than 80 homes were destroyed
Upsetting: Tom and Deidre Duffy look through the wreckage of their home at Breezy Point, in Queens, which was devastated by fire
Gone: Deidre Duffy studies all that is left of her home at Breezy Point, in the Queens borough of New York
Toy: A doll's head can be seen among the charred remains of a house destroyed by fire in the aftermath of the post-tropical storm
Left: A map showing track of Hurricane Sandy through New England, with inset showing projected rainfall totals through Wednesday night and right. mid-Atlantic states showing storm surge from the superstorm storm
View from above: This aerial photograph shows burned-out homes in the Breezy Point section of the Queens borough of New York after the fire
Water, water everywhere: An aerial view of flooding on the bay side of Seaside, New Jersey
Flooded areas: Highlighted areas show flooding in New York. An unprecedented 13-foot surge of seawater - 3 feet above the previous record - gushed into Gotham
A dead deer is pictured with driftwood and debris left by a combination of storm surge and high tide
Precarious: A crane attached to One57, a luxury apartment tower under construction in midtown Manhattan, hangs down after partially collapsing amid gusts from Sandy
Shock: Residents look over the remains of burned homes in the Rockaways section
Rescued: Hospital workers evacuate a patient Deborah Dadlani from NYU Langone Medical Center during Hurricane Sandy
No train service: Veronica De Souza posted this extraordinary picture ('via ninjapito') on Twitter of the 86th Street station with water above the platform
Aid at hand: An emergency operations centre in Fairfax County, Virginia, co-ordinates the mammoth response to the severe flooding caused by Sandy Shipping and business travel has been suspended in areas of the Northeast. More than 15,000 flights have been grounded. On Tuesday, more than 6,000 flights were canceled, according to the flight-tracking service FlightAware. More than 500 flights scheduled for Wednesday were also canceled. The three big New York airports were closed on Tuesday. The 1,000-mile-wide storm lashed towns and cities up and down the East Coast, with cars floating down streets in New York City and the 911 system inundated with 10,000 calls every 30 minutes. Scene: A car passes a tree lying on power lines the morning after Hurricane Sandy hit Dartmouth, Massachusetts
Obstacle: A driver navigates under a downed tree and power lines in Newton, Massachusetts as dawn breaks
Split: The wall of this house in Delaware County, Pennsylvania, shows how hard the East Coast has been pummeled by Sandy
Smashed: A giant tree crosses a street, leaving it impassable for any vehicles in Ridgewood, New Jersey
Water world: The famous casinos of Atlantic City, New Jersey, were submeraged after superstorm Sandy hit land nearby
Lashed with rain: A van skids in the flooded streets of Atlantic city, where casinos are shuttered, tourists have and 500 are trapped in their homes
U.S. Route 30, the White Horse Pike, one of three major approaches to Atlantic City, New Jersey, is covered with water from Absecon Bay during the approach of Hurricane Sandy
A man stands on a dry patch of sidewalk on a flooded street as Hurricane Sandy moves up the coast
Battered by the boardwalk: An empty street in flooded Atlantic City, which has taken a direct hit from the superstorm, forcing residents to flee inland
Submerged: A car is covered by water near the Consolidated Edison power plant in New York, after Sandy knocked out power to at least 8million people, and large sections of the city were plunged into darkness
Terrifying episode: Heavy waves smash over the seawall in Winthrop, with the 911 system inundated with 10,000 calls every half hour
Sea life: A row of houses stands in floodwaters at Grassy Sound in North Wildwood, New Jersey, after the powerful storm lurched westwards and took dead aim at New Jersey and Delaware
Devastation: Bulldozers swing into action to clean up Fort Lauderdale after Sandy swept along the coast
Breached: Floodwaters from Sandy rush into the Port Authority bus terminal in New Jersey through an elevator shaft
Intense: A journalist battles to get to work in ravaged Atlantic City
A police car drives through a flooded street near the Atlantic City Convention Center on Monday
A flooded street between two casinos along the Boardwalk before the arrival of Hurricane Sandy as 'Frankenstorm' threatened to wreak havoc on the area with storm surges, driving rain and devastating winds
Pounding waves have already broken up sections of the Atlantic City boardwalk, according to photos posted to social media and discussion on police and fire scanners
Flooding begins to inundate a parking garage ahead of Hurricane Sandy as Governor Chris Christie's emergency declaration shut down the city's casinos and 30,000 residents were ordered to evacuate
A car sits in a flooded street near the ocean ahead of Hurricane Sandy today - and the worst is yet to come
A security guard stands outside the entrance of Caesar's Casino on the Atlantic City boardwalk, with doors covered with sheets of plywood for protection
Skyline: Brooklyn Bridge Park pictured here after it flooded following the arrival of Sandy, which has made landfall on the East Coast of the US
Flooding: Water rushes into the Carey Tunnel (previously the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel), caused by Sandy on Monday night in the financial district of New York
Flood water rushes into a below-ground carpark in New York's Financial District
Raging: More than 50 homes have been destroyed at Breezy Point in the Queens area of New York, as a result of Hurricane Sandy
Eye of the storm: New York was among the hardest hit by Superstorm Sandy. A fire broke out in Breezy Point, Queens, destroying between 80 and 100 housesBattle: More than 190 firefighters have contained the six-alarm blaze fire in the Breezy Point section, but they are still putting out some pockets of fireDestruction: Cars floating after being pushed out a flooded basement in the city during last night's batteringBeached: A huge tanker washed up on shore in Staten Island after the superstorm hit the east coastTransport down: A view of an entirely flooded tunnel under Battery Park. New York was among the hardest hit, with its financial heart in Lower Manhattan shuttered for a second day and seawater cascading into the still-gaping construction pit at the World Trade CenterDamaged: A building that had its facade ripped off by Hurricane Sandy - beds and radiators can be seen in the blockNew York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg says the death toll in the America's most populous city is up to 10.He also says it could be three days or more before power is restored to hundreds of thousands of people now in the dark.
He is giving no estimate on when public transit would be running, though he expects some buses be running later today.He said there have nor been any storm-related fatalities in NYC hospitals.Among the dead in New York were two children killed instantly by a falling tree in Westchester County, a woman electrocuted to death by falling wires in Manhattan and a 29-year-old man killed in a car crash in Queens. A 30-year-old man was also killed when a tree fell on his house in Flushing, Queens.Emergency: President Barack Obama has declared a 'major disaster' in New York and Long Island. Pictured, he receives an update on the ongoing response to Hurricane Sandy, in the Situation Room of the White House, via teleconferenceWrecked: A construction site sinks into a large hole on South Street Seaport - the clean-up operation is expected to cost over £12 billionCity of water: A flooded street in the Dumbo section of Brooklyn after the city awakens to the affects of Hurricane Sandy. It hit the mainland at 6.30pm local time last night having laid waste to large parts of the coast throughout the dayRoad blocked: Pieces of lumber displaced from a yard by rising flood waters are seen beneath Manhattan Bridge in the aftermath of Hurricane SandyDeluge: Water floods over the barriers in New York. The city's transit system, schools, the stock exchange and Broadway were also shut after a 13ft wall of water caused by the storm surge and high tides brought severe flooding to subways and road tunnelsTransformation: A subway station now resembles a river in one of the US's largest citiesPower storm: The full force of the storm is evident by the way a metal shutter has been ripped from the wallOperation clean-up: Debris litters a flooded street in the Dumbo section of Brooklyn after the city awakens to the affects of Hurricane SandyMission: A man clears leaves from a sewer drain in lower Manhattan to help the flooding easeThe storm caused the worst damage in the 108-year history of New York's extensive subway system, according to Joseph Lhota, the chairman of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.'This will be one for the record books,' said John Miksad, senior vice president for electric operations at Consolidated Edison, which had more than 670,000 customers without power in and around New York City.An unprecedented 13-foot surge of seawater - 3 feet above the previous record - gushed into Gotham, inundating tunnels, subway stations and the electrical system that powers Wall Street, and sent hospital patients and tourists scrambling for safety.Curiosity turned to concern overnight as New York City residents watched whole neighborhoods disappear into darkness as power was cut.The World Trade Center site was a glowing ghost near the tip of Lower Manhattan.Residents reported seeing no lights but the strobes of emergency vehicles and the glimpses of flashlights in nearby apartments. Lobbies were flooded, cars floated and people started to worry about food.A huge fire destroyed 80 to 100 houses in a flooded beachfront neighborhood Tuesday, forcing firefighters to undertake daring rescues and injuring three people.More than 190 firefighters contained the blaze but were still putting out some pockets of fire more than nine hours after it erupted.As daylight broke, neighbors walked around aimlessly through their smoke-filled Breezy Point neighborhood, which sits on the Rockaway peninsula jutting into the Atlantic Ocean. Electrical wires dangled within feet of the street.Officials said the fire was reported around 11 p.m. Monday in an area flooded by the superstorm that began sweeping through the city earlier.Flooded areas: Highlighted areas show flooding in New York. An unprecedented 13-foot surge of seawater - 3 feet above the previous record - gushed into GothamDrifting: Hurricane Sandy, pictured today moves inland across the mid-Atlantic region after causing carnage in New YorkPlan of action: Workers survey the damage from a fallen tree in lower Manhattan this morningDebris: A dead deer, right, is pictured with driftwood and debris left by a combination of storm surge as a man holds a battered road signRipped from the ground: People pass a fallen tree in the Battery Park neighborhood of ManhattanFirefighters told WABC-TV that the water was chest high on the street, and they had to use a boat to make rescues.They said in one apartment home, about 25 people were trapped in an upstairs unit, and the two-story home next door was ablaze and setting fire to the apartment's roof.Firefighters climbed an awning to get to the trapped people and took them downstairs to a boat in the street.Video footage of the scene showed a hellish swath of tightly packed homes fully engulfed in orange flames as firefighters hauled hoses while sloshing in ankle-high water.Many homes appeared completely flattened by the wind-whipped flames. One firefighter suffered a minor injury and was taken to a hospital.Two civilians suffered minor injuries and were treated at the scene.Time to act: President Obama has declared a 'major disaster' in New York and Long Island as swathes of the city woke up under water after a night of being battered by Superstorm SandyBlackout: The skyline of lower Manhattan sits in darkness after a preventive power outage in New York on Monday nightOn its own: The New York skyline remains dark on Monday, except for the Empire State Building, as seen from Williamsburg in the Brooklyn borough of New YorkA tale of two cities: Lower Manhattan in darkness after Sandy struck damaging power and previously New York city's famous lit-up skylineLooking down: These shocking views taken from high-rise buildings in Manhattan show the extent of flooding in New York City after it was hit by Superstorm SandyDangerous waves: This photo taken on Monday night shows a flooded street in Manhattan as Superstorm Sandy made its approach in New YorkRescued: Hospital workers evacuate a patient Deborah Dadlani from NYU Langone Medical Center during Hurricane Sandyighting the way: Using torches Deborah Dadlani is moved in the dark from NYU Langone Medical CenterIn September, the same neighborhood was struck by a tornado that hurled debris in the air, knocked out power and startled residents who once thought of twisters as a Midwestern phenomenon.Skyscrapers swayed and creaked in winds that partially toppled a crane 74 stories above Midtown.Right before dawn, a handful of taxis were out on the streets, though there was an abundance of emergency and police vehicles.The massive storm reached well into the Midwest: Chicago officials warned residents to stay away from the Lake Michigan shore as the city prepares for winds of up to 60 mph and waves exceeding 24 feet well into Wednesday.Remnants of the former Category 1 hurricane were forecast to head across Pennsylvania before taking another sharp turn into western New York by Wednesday morning.Although weakening as it goes, the massive storm - which caused wind warnings from Florida to Canada - will continue to bring heavy rain and local flooding, said Daniel Brown, warning coordination meteorologist at the National Hurricane Center in Miami.As Hurricane Sandy closed in on the Northeast, it converged with a cold-weather system that turned it into a monstrous hybrid of rain and high wind - and even snow in West Virginia and other mountainous areas inland.Skyline: Brooklyn Bridge Park pictured here after it flooded following the arrival of Sandy, which has made landfall on the East Coast of the USBang: This image from video provided by Dani Hart shows what appears to be a transformer exploding in lower Manhattan as seen from a building rooftop in BrooklynBright light: This photo shows what appear to be transformers exploding after much of lower Manhattan lost power during Superstorm Sandy in New YorkFlooding: Water rushes into the Carey Tunnel (previously the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel), caused by Sandy on Monday night in the financial district of New YorkFlood water rushes into a below-ground carpark in New York's Financial DistrictNon-movers: New York City taxis are pictured on a flooded street in Queens after Sandy struck the US East CoastSANDY KILLS AT LEAST 18 PEOPLEAt least 33 people have died in the devastation wreaked by Superstorm Sandy - including two children killed instantly by a falling tree.The children - named locally as Jack Baumler, 11, and Michael Robson, 13 - were crushed by the toppled tree as they played outside their home in Westchester County, New York state, at 6.45pm on Monday.Other fatalities include a woman who was electrocuted to death by falling wires on Manhattan’s 134th Street and a 29-year-old man who was killed in a car crash in Queens.A man was crushed by a falling tree in Ulster County, New York State, and one death has been reported in Connecticut and two people were killed when their pick-up was crushed by a falling tree in New Jersey.Police in Toronto said a woman was killed by a falling sign as high winds closed in on Canada's largest city.A 30-year-old man was killed when a tree fell on his house on 166th Street in Flushing, New York City.Meanwhile a 62-year-old man was killed as he let his dog out on his porch in Oley, Pennsylvania.An eight-year-old boy died when he was crushed by a falling tree in Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania.And a jogger was reportedly hospitalised after being crushed by a falling tree in Brooklyn’s Prospect Park.Just before it made landfall at 8 p.m. near Atlantic City, N.J., forecasters stripped Sandy of hurricane status - but the distinction was purely technical, based on its shape and internal temperature.It still packed hurricane-force wind, and forecasters were careful to say it was still dangerous to the tens of millions in its path.While the hurricane's 90 mph winds registered as only a Category 1 on a scale of five, it packed 'astoundingly low' barometric pressure, giving it terrific energy to push water inland, said Kerry Emanuel, a professor of meteorology at MIT.Officials blamed at least 16 deaths on the converging storms - five in New York, three each in New Jersey and Pennsylvania, two in Connecticut, and one each in Maryland, North Carolina and West Virginia.Three of the victims were children, one just 8 years old.Sandy, which killed 69 people in the Caribbean before making its way up the Eastern Seaboard, began to hook left at midday Monday toward the New Jersey coast.Even before it made landfall, crashing waves had claimed an old, 50-foot piece of Atlantic City's world-famous Boardwalk.'We are looking at the highest storm surges ever recorded' in the Northeast, said Jeff Masters, meteorology director for Weather Underground, a private forecasting service.Sitting on the dangerous northeast wall of the storm, the New York metropolitan area got the worst of itRaging: More than 50 homes have been destroyed at Breezy Point in the Queens area of New York, as a result of Hurricane SandyWater level: Streets are flooded under the Manhattan Bridge in the DUMBO (Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass) section of Brooklyn, New York, on Monday nightIsolated: Jane's Carousel, the vintage merry-go-round in Brooklyn Bridge Park, in the DUMBO (Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass) section of Brooklyn, is 'basically an island now', Instagram user Andjelicaaa said.An explosion at a ConEdison substation knocked out power to about 310,000 customers in Manhattan, said Miksad.'We see a pop. The whole sky lights up,' said Dani Hart, 30, who was watching the storm from the roof of her building in the Navy Yards.'It sounded like the Fourth of July,' Stephen Weisbrot said from his 10th-floor apartment.New York University's Tisch Hospital was forced to evacuate 200 patients after its backup generator failed. NYU Medical Dean Robert Grossman said patients - among them 20 babies from neonatal intensive care that were on battery-powered respirators - had to be carried down staircases and to dozens of waiting ambulances.Without power, the hospital had no elevator service, meaning patients had to be carefully carried down staircases and outside into the weather. Gusts of wind blew their blankets as nurses held IVs and other equipment.New York University, Downtown and Manhattan Veterans Affairs hospitals were evacuated.Bellevue and Coney Island hospitals have no power. There have been no storm-related fatalities in the hospitals and there are 6,100 people in city shelters.About 670,000 homes and businesses were without power late Monday in the city and suburban Westchester County.Extraordinary: This CCTV photo shows flood waters from Hurricane Sandy rushing in to the Hoboken PATH train station through an elevator shaft in New JerseyHelp: New York City resident Gary He posted this picture with the caption 'Dude in snorkeling mask trying to rescue his friend in Greenpoint (Brooklyn)'City landscape: The Queens Bridge and flooded shore is pictured on Roosevelt Island in New York City on Monday nightPrecarious: A crane attached to One57, a luxury apartment tower under construction in midtown Manhattan, hangs down after partially collapsing amid gusts from SandyNo go area: An uprooted tree blocks 7th street near Avenue D in the East Village as a result of high winds from Sandy on Monday in Manhattan, New YorkNo train service: Veronica De Souza posted this extraordinary picture ('via ninjapito') on Twitter of the 86th Street station with water above the platformAid at hand: An emergency operations centre in Fairfax County, Virginia, co-ordinates the mammoth response to the severe flooding caused by SandyIn Schwartz's Brooklyn neighborhood of Red Hook, residents who ignored a mandatory evacuation order awoke to debris-strewn streets and a continued blackout. About 2 inches of mucky dirt and leaves covered streets crisscrossed by downed power lines after water sloshed 12 blocks inland.The doors of the Fairway grocery store were blown out. Several cars left in the parking lot were shifted by flood waters overnight and were left crammed door to door.Schwartz and her husband rode out the storm on the third floor of the residences above the Fairway and said white-capped flood waters reached at least 3 feet around the building."It was scary how fast the water came up," she said.The facade of a four-story Manhattan building in the Chelsea neighborhood crumbled and collapsed suddenly, leaving the lights, couches, cabinets and desks inside visible from the street. No one was hurt, although some of the falling debris hit a car.Not only was the subway shut down, but the Holland Tunnel connecting New York to New Jersey was closed, as was a tunnel between Brooklyn and Manhattan. The Brooklyn Bridge, the George Washington Bridge, the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge and several other spans were closed due to high winds.The three major airports in the New York area - LaGuardia, Newark Liberty and Kennedy - remained shut down Tuesday.Overall, more than 13,500 flights had been canceled for Monday and Tuesday, almost all related to the storm, according to the flight-tracking service FlightAware.A construction crane atop a $1.5 billion luxury high-rise in midtown Manhattan collapsed in high winds and dangled precariously. Thousands of people were ordered to leave several nearby buildings as a precaution, including 900 guests at the ultramodern Le Parker Meridien hotel.No lights: A power outage is seen on Monday in Manhattan, New York, with Hurricane Sandy threatening 50million people in the Mid-Atlantic area of the USNo movement: Vehicles are submerged on 14th Street near the Consolidated Edison power plant on Monday in Manhattan, New YorkDowned: A fallen tree lays along a darkened Sixth Avenue in Chelsea during a blackout caused by rising river waters as Hurricane Sandy made its approach in New YorkAlice Goldberg, 15, a tourist from Paris, was watching television in the hotel - whose slogan is 'Uptown, Not Uptight' - when a voice came over the loudspeaker and told everyone to leave.'They said to take only what we needed, and leave the rest, because we'll come back in two or three days,' she said as she and hundreds of others gathered in the luggage-strewn marble lobby. 'I hope so.'Wall Street remained closed today and U.S. stock exchanges said they were testing contingency plans to ensure trading resumes as soon as possible this week after Hurricane Sandy hit the East Coast.U.S. markets will be closed for a second day - the first time since 1888 that the NYSE remained closed for two consecutive days due to weather.The New York Stock Exchange said contingency plans are being tested only as a safety measure.Fire destroyed at least 50 homes Monday night in a flooded neighborhood in the Breezy Point section of the borough of Queens, where the Rockaway peninsula juts into the Atlantic Ocean.Firefighters told WABC-TV that they had to use a boat to rescue residents because the water was chest high on the street. About 25 people were trapped in one home, with two injuries reported.Airlines canceled around 12,500 flights because of the storm, a number that was expected to grow.Off North Carolina, not far from an area known as 'the Graveyard of the Atlantic,' a replica of the 18th-century sailing ship HMS Bounty that was built for the 1962 Marlon Brando movie 'Mutiny on the Bounty' sank when her diesel engine and bilge pumps failed. Coast Guard helicopters plucked 14 crew members from rubber lifeboats bobbing in 18-foot seas.A 15th crew member who was found unresponsive several hours after the others was later pronounced dead. The Bounty's captain was still missing.Going nowhere: Chris Berg posted this picture of the flooded Midtown Tunnel in New York City after Sandy hit the US East Coast on Monday nightOne of the units at Indian Point, a nuclear power plant about 45 miles north of New York City, was shut down around 10:45 p.m. Monday because of external electrical grid issues, said Entergy Corp., which operates the plant. The company said there was no risk to employees or the public.And officials declared an 'unusual event' at the Oyster Creek nuclear power plant in Lacey Township, N.J., the nation's oldest, when waters surged to 6 feet above sea level during the evening.Within two hours, the situation at the reactor - which was offline for regular maintenance - was upgraded to an alert, the second-lowest in a four-tiered warning system. Oyster Creek provides 9 percent of the state's electricity.In Baltimore, fire officials said four unoccupied rowhouses collapsed in the storm, sending debris into the street but causing no injuries. Meanwhile, a blizzard in far western Maryland caused a pileup of tractor-trailers that blocked the westbound lanes of Interstate 68 on slippery Big Savage Mountain near the town of Finzel.'It's like a long-tailed cat in a room full of rocking chairs up here,' said Bill Wiltson, a Maryland State Police dispatcher.Hundreds of miles from the storm's center, gusts topping 60 mph prompted officials to close the port of Portland, Maine, and scaring away several cruise ships.A state of emergency in New Hampshire prompted Vice President Joe Biden to cancel a rally in Keene and Republican nominee Mitt Romney's wife, Ann, to call off her bus tour through the Granite State.Split country: The US forecast today shows a large difference between the East and West coastCausing chaos: A satellite image shows post-Tropical Cyclone Sandy making landfall at 8 p.m. ET on 29 October about 5 miles southwest of Atlantic City, NJ, as seen in this NOAA GOES-13 satellite colorized infrared image from the same timeMammoth storm: This satellite picture released by NASA shows Hurricane Sandy approaching the densely populated US East Coast at 1:35pm EDT on MondayUnderwater: A vehicle is submerged on 14th Street near the Consolidated Edison power plant on Monday night in New YorkFire rescue: An FDNY inflatable is prepared for launch along 14th street east of Avenue B where water has trapped people in the wake of Hurricane SandyHazards: This weather map for today shows how much of the US East Coast has been hit by storm warnings as it is battered by Superstorm SandyStaying safe: This National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration map of the US East Coast shows the various warning levels put in place across the countryJourney: Graphic showing the current position of the superstorm after it swept up the US East CoastMoving across: NASA's Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) instrument on NASA's Aqua spacecraft captured this infrared image of Hurricane Sandy, another weather front to the west and cold air coming down from Canada at 2:17 p.m. EDT yesterdayAbout 360,000 people in 30 Connecticut towns were urged to leave their homes under mandatory and voluntary evacuation orders. Christi McEldowney was among those who fled to a Fairfield shelter. She and other families brought tents for their children to play in.'There's something about this storm,' she said. 'I feel it deep inside.'Despite dire warnings and evacuation orders that began Saturday, many stayed put.New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie - whose own family had to move to the executive mansion after his home in Mendham, far from the storm's center, lost power - criticized the mayor of Atlantic City for opening shelters there instead of forcing people out.Eugenia Buono, 77, and her neighbor, Elaine DiCandio, 76, were among several dozen people who took shelter at South Kingstown High School in Narragansett, R.I. They live on Harbor Island, which is connected to the mainland by a causeway.Submerged: Instagram user 'Jesse and Greg' posted this incredible picture of East Village flooding in Manhattan, New YorkAbove waist high: A man wearing a snorkel is seen wading through the water in New York City on Monday nightShip: This photo by Dylan Patrick shows flooding along the Westside Highway near the USS Intrepid, background centre, as Sandy moves through the areaUnderwater: The surge from New York's East River has flooded East 20th Street, turning the road into a river'I'm not an idiot,' said Buono, who survived hurricanes Carol in 1954 and Bob in 1991. 'People are very foolish if they don't leave.'Reggie Thomas emerged this morning from his job as a maintenance supervisor at a prison near the overflowing Hudson River, a toothbrush in his front pocket, to find his 2011 Honda with its windows down and a foot (304 millimeters) of water inside.'It's totaled,' Thomas said, with a shrug. 'You would have needed a boat last night.'Today stock trading is closed in the U.S. again for a second day running - the last time the New York Stock Exchange was closed for weather was in 1985 because of Hurricane Gloria, and it will be the first time since 1888 that the exchange will have been closed for two consecutive days because of weather.Residents in New York City spent much of yesterday trying to salvage normal routines, jogging and snapping pictures of the water while officials warned the worst of the storm had not hit. Water lapped over the seawall in Battery Park City, flooding rail yards, subway tracks, tunnels and roads.Sailboats rock in choppy water at a dock along the Hudson River Greenway as one thousand more troops have been drafted inLeaving: Guests in the lobby of Le Parker Meridien hotel just south of Central Park prepare to move to other hotels after a nearby construction crane collapsedCars were flooded in the Financial District of New York as Hurricane Sandy threatens 50million people on the East CoastAs flood waters surge, expected to rise to 10ft, nearly all bridges and tunnels into and out of New York are closed to the publicA person holds onto to a flooded car as the flood water rises in New YorkFlood waters have overwhelmed the entrance of the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel as nearly all bridges and tunnels into and out of New York are closed to the publicDevastation: A fallen tree and power line ripped from the ground outside homes on Harvard Street in Garden City, New YorkNYC'S HISTORY OF HURRICANES1821 Hurricane:Without modern technology, the hurricane in September, 1821, caught New Yorkers off guard when, in one hour, the tide rose 13 feet. The East River and Hudson River breached, with their waters meeting across Lower Manhattan. The area was not largely populated then, so there were few deaths1893 Hurricane A Category 1 hurricane completely destroyed Hog Island, a resort island in southern Queens1938 HurricaneNearly 200 people were killed when the Category 3 hurricane swept over Long Island and into New England. It caused millions of dollars of damages in NYC, where it killed 10 people and destroyed hundreds of trees in Central Park1954, Carol The hurricane, which had sustained winds of more than 100mph, hit eastern Long Island and caused major flooding throughout New York City1955, Connie and Diane Rain from the two hurricanes caused flooding across the city. There were more than 200 deaths in Pennsylvania, New York and New Jersey1960, Donna The hurricane created an 11-foot storm tide in the New York Harbor, inflicting extensive pier damage1972, Agnes The tropical storm flooded areas from North Caroline to New York and caused 122 deaths and more than $6 billion in damage1985, Gloria Serious damage was inflicted on Long Island1996, Bertha The tropical storm washed out the city in July 19661999, Floyd The tropical storm hit New Jersey and New York with 60mph winds and dropped up to 15 inches of rain. Flash flooding forced residents from their homes2011, IreneThe hurricane was downgraded to a tropical storm just before hitting the city, which had issued mandatory evacuation orders for those living along the coast. Up to 7 inches of rain fell as winds reached 65 mph. It inflicted an estimated $100 million in damagesRead more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2225108/Hurricane-Sandy-2012-Obama-declares-major-disaster-New-York-33-people-die-Superstorm.html#ixzz2Ano1ICr1Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on FacebookThe lights go out in New York: One MILLION without power as Bloomberg urges residents to stay home and prepare for the worst of Sandy to hit city
One million homes in the New York area lost power by 6pm on Monday as Hurricane Sandy barreled toward the New Jersey coast.New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg urged New Yorkers to stay indoors and weather the storm from the relative safety of their homes.Power was out in most of Lower Manhattan south of 26th Street and streets were inundated with flood waters, submerging cars and flooding the Ground Zero construction site.'The most severe part of the storm is now beginning,' he said at an evening press conference.He added 'The time for relocation or evacuation is now over.'But even if residents of the city wanted to travel, there's nowhere for them to go. Nearly all major crossings into and out of the city have been shut down in preparation for Sandy making landfall.'The important thing here is stay inside,' Bloomberg said. 'Our advice is try to relax and spend the night in. The worst of it should be over by tomorrow.'The height of the storm surge, which could top ten feet, will hit New York about 8.15pm on Monday -- with dangerously high water rising between 6.30 and 10.30pm.Underwater: The surge from New York's East River has flooded East 20th Street, turning the road into a riverThe construction site at Ground Zero in Lower Manhattan has flooded as the waters riseSailboats rock in choppy water at a dock along the Hudson River Greenway as one thousand more troops have been drafted inConsolidated Edison spokesman Chris Olert said on Monday evening that the power was out for most of Manhattan south of 26th Street.On the east side, the power outage extended from 29th Street south. There were some scattered areas that still had electricity.Mr Olert said the damage stemmed from flooding and the probable loss of a transmission feeder.The power outage was separate from a planned power cut that Con Ed did in certain lower Manhattan neighborhoods to protect underwater systems from flood damage.Olert said there were 250,000 customers without power in Manhattan. A customer represents a single meter, so the number of people actually affected is likely to be higher.The New York Fire Department responded to a building in Manhattan's West Village when a front wall fell off an collapsed into the street, exposing four apartments to the elements.No injuries were reported.New York Gov Andrew Cuomo is calling up an additional 1,000 National Guard troops, doubling the superstorm force he initially thought would be enough to deal with the impending mayhem due to hit the city.Cars were flooded in the Financial District of New York as Hurricane Sandy threatens 50million people on the East CoastAs flood waters surge, expected to rise to 10ft, nearly all bridges and tunnels into and out of New York are closed to the publicA person holds onto to a flooded car as the flood water rises in New YorkCuomo says the troops will be used to prepare for a possible historic storm surge and to contend with widespread damage and power outages caused by Hurricane Sandy.He already called up 1,000 National Guard troopers on Sunday, saying today the 'cruel irony' is that the state is better prepared now because of last year's tropical storms.The Army Corps of Engineers says the state is very well prepared and more bridges and tunnels around the city are expected to be closed at 7pm.Police evacuated the area surrounding a super luxury high-rise under construction near Carnegie Hall as a rooftop crane dangled precariously in the wind on the roof.Flood waters have overwhelmed the entrance of the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel as nearly all bridges and tunnels into and out of New York are closed to the publicFlood water rushes into a below-ground carpark in New York's Financial DistrictThree friends make their way along a flooded street as the beginning effects of Hurricane Sandy are felt in the Red Hook neighborhood of Brooklyn
People walk by sand bags in front of a building in Times Square as Hurricane Sandy begins to affect the areaBreaking through: Waves wash over the sea wall near high tide at Battery Park in New York on Monday morningFlood: East River already creeping over at the end of Java Street in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, where a woman was hit by a fallen tree earlierShe's coming: A satellite image taken Sunday morning by the National Hurricane Center shows Sandy heading north
Collapse: The face fell off an apartment building at 14th Street and Eighth Avenue Monday night, exposing four apartments to the elementsCleared out: A shopper in Long Beach in Long Island grabs the few remaining water bottles from the shelves at the Waldbaums grocery storeFlooding: A truck drives through water pushed over a road by Hurricane Sandy in Southampton, New York on Monday as the storm gathers speedAll major U.S. stock and options exchanges will remain closed on Tuesday, as will schools and the subwayThe National Weather Service is reporting 24-foot seas off New Jersey after the storm continues to gather strength as it barrels across the Atlantic.City officials are bracing for the high tide which is expected to come around 8pm with Gov Cuomo warning: 'The worst is still to come. Do not underestimate this storm.He added: 'We are known for our toughness, but we have a sense of community that is very inspirational.'LILCO reported more than 115,000 customers on Long Island were without power from Monday morning. Con Edison said at least 21,000 customers in New York City and in Westchester County are without power, while in upstate New York, 10,600 customers are affected.Two key tunnels connecting Manhattan to New Jersey and Brooklyn would be closed later on Monday ahead of the hurricane.Cuomo said the Holland Tunnel, which opened in 1927 and remains one of the main connections between New Jersey and New York City, would close as a precaution at 2pm.The Hugh L. Carey Tunnel, known locally as the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel, will also shut down at the time. New York City bridges will remain open for now, he said at a news conference.Those on the upper floors of high-rise buildings are getting ready to be evacuated because the winds are going to be significantly stronger than those near ground level.An alarm was raised after a crane on West 57th Street collapsed on to a 75-story building.New Yorkers spent most of yesterday cleaning out grocery stores as they stocked up on water, batteries, candles and essential food items.People take pictures in Battery Park along the Hudson River as Hurricane Sandy, the monster storm bearing down on the U.S. East Coast, approachesWorkers put sand bags out in front of a building in the Financial District as the beginning effects of Hurricane Sandy are felt in downtown New YorkNew York subways are closed for only the second time in historyPaula Buck carries her dog as she walks along a flooded street while evacuating her apartment as the early effects of Hurricane Sandy are felt in the Red Hook neighborhood of BrooklynA man takes pictures of the skyline of New York from a park along the Hudson River across from the Empire State Building as rain falls in Hoboken, New JerseyWaves crash over the bow of a tug boat as it passes near the Statue of Liberty as rough water as a result of Hurricane Sandy churned the waters of New York HarborPeter Cusack, center, and Mel Bermudez walk their dogs Teague, left, and Molly, along the Brooklyn waterfront beneath the New York skyline as Hurricane Sandy advances on the city
Obama warned New Yorkers to expect a lot of water and a lot of fallen treesPresident Barack Obama called on Americans yesterday to take Hurricane Sandy 'very seriously', urging them to heed the instructions of local and state authoritiesEnd of the line: The last few people make their way through Grand Central Station in New York as the subway shut down tonight for only the second time in history
All aboard? A subway worker looks up and down the platform as the subway shuts down at 7pm on Sunday nightEerie: A strange stillness came over Grand Central on 42nd Street, usually one of the busiest junctions in New York CityLocking up: Assistant Station Master Cory Harris chains the doors of Grand Central Station as a city-wide transit shutdown came into force tonightNo entry: Caution tape covers the entrance to the Times Square Subway StationHeading home: A woman tries to find cell signal on the last subway shuttle from Grand Central Station'If you don't evacuate, you are not only endangering your life, you are also endangering the lives of the first responders who are going in to rescue you,' he said today.'This is a serious and dangerous storm.'New York Governor Andrew Cuomo echoed Bloomberg’s warnings. 'A situation like this, you don't want to be overly panicked and overly prepared, but you want to be prudent, you want to do what's necessary,' he said.Cuomo also said the National Guard would be deployed, 200 troops in New York City, and 400 on Long Island.
People stand on a pier as waves crash into the beach as the beginning effects of Hurricane Sandy are felt in Coney Island in BrooklynTaking cover: A boarded up Broad Street subway station across the street from the New York Stock ExchangeHeading home: The New York subway system was closing at 7pm tonight - only the second time in historyStockpile: People try to get through the aisles at Whole Foods Market in midtown ManhattanPacked: Customers wait in line to buy groceries at the Fairway super market in New YorkGathering: Shoppers stock up on supplies ahead of Hurricane Sandy in New York todayHydration transportation: A woman drags a basket full of bottled water down 7th Ave in a Duane Reade cartCyclone: A NASA satellite image taken at 4pm Sunday shows Sandy's devastating path from spaceThe New York Stock Exchange closed the trading floor on both Monday and Tuesday because it lies within a mandatory evacuation zone. They had planned to continue electronically but decided to cease all trading as news of the strengthening storm reached them.In addition, nearly 4,000 flights were canceled for Monday, with 857 cancellations at Newark in New Jersey, followed by 632 at New York's Kennedy Airport and more than 500 cancellations at both New York's LaGuardia and Philadelphia International.FlightAware said it expects the number of flight cancellations for Monday and Tuesday to 'rise considerably.'A spokesman for United Airlines parent United Continental Holdings Inc. told the Associated Press that the carrier has suspended an unspecified number of flights to New York and Washington-area airports beginning Sunday evening with plans to resume Tuesday as conditions permit.JetBlue Airways, which flies out of JFK, said it has canceled more than 1,000 flights from Sunday through Wednesday morning.Superstorm Sandy finally makes landfall as deadly front slams into East Coast with millions fearing the worst
Hurricane Sandy slammed into the East Coast around 6.30pm EST last night as millions of Americans are warned it was still unsafe as the rain eases.Three people were killed by falling trees as the storm lashed towns and cities. A 30-year-old man died after being hit by a tree in Queens, New York, and two more people were killed when a tree landed on their car.New York Governor Andrew Cuomo confirmed that cars were floating down flood-hit streets in Lower Manhattan.Mr Cuomo said that the 911 system was being inundated with 10,000 calls every half an hour.He said: 'Please do not call 911 unless it's a life-threatening emergency.'
Howling: Conditions in New Jersey deteriorate as the superstorm makes landfall, causing widespread destructionSlammed: People take shelter on the flooded pier as the effects of Hurricane Sandy are felt in Rockaway Beach, New YorkEmergency: Braving horrendous conditions, a worker uses a chainsaw to cut up a felled tree that knocked over a street light in York City, Pennsylvania, as Superstorm Sandy continues on its pathGround Zero: The construction site at Ground Zero is inundated by flood waters in Lower ManhattanPower out: Lower Manhattan goes dark as Hurricane Sandy sweeps across America's East Coast, causing untold damage and putting lives at riskSubmerged: Cars disappear from view as water rises in New York's flood-hit financial district, which lay in Hurricane Sandy's pathSubmerged: Water from Manhattan's East River floods East 20th Street during Hurricane SandyDangerous: A woman wades through the water in New York as cars become submerged in the floodsFloods: Vehicles are submerged during a storm surge near the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel in New YorkDramatic: A CCTV monitor shows floodwater rushing into the subway system in New York as Hurricane Sandy causes widespread devastationWaves in the city: Streets are flooded under the Manhattan Bridge in the Dumbo section of Brooklyn, New YorkWaterproofs: Wearing wellington boots and a hooded jacket, a resident navigates the flooded streets of the Dumbo neighbourhood of Brooklyn, New YorkSandy had laid waste to large parts of the coast throughout the day, leaving more than two million without power in Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Rhode Island and Virginia while whole cities have been flooded and billions of dollars of damage expected.But as darkness fell, Sandy was about to make landfall at Cape May, New Jersey. Winds rose up to 90mph with fresh warnings that the 'most severe part of the storm is now beginning'.Storm surges of more than 12ft have already been recorded in Long Island, with waters rising quickly in Lower Manhattan as high tide approaches. Howling winds of 100mph have been reported on the RFK Bridge in upper Manhattan as gales were expected to last for hours.Sandy has revealed the first signs of her monstrous power, dumping snow, breaching rivers and forcing floodwaters into towns and homes across the East Coast.New YorkMayor Michael Bloomberg told citizens at a 6pm press conference that: 'The most severe part of the storm is now beginning' and warned people that the time for evacuation was now over and to stay indoors, with the peak surge in the city's harbor lasting until 10.30pm (EST).Brooklyn, Manhattan, Williamsburg, RFK and Queensboro bridges in New York will shut at 7pm.A below-ground carpark in the Financial District of New York floods as waters rushes into the garageAll Broadway shows had been cancelled on Monday evening.Utilities company ConEd had called customers to warn it will shut off power lines across Manhattan and Brooklyn, meaning millions more will be affected.Consolidated Edison spokesman Chris Olert said on Monday evening that the power was out for most of Manhattan south of 26th Street.On the east side, the power outage extended from 29th Street south. There were some scattered areas that still had electricity.Olert said the damage stemmed from flooding and the probable loss of a transmission feeder.The power outage was separate from a planned power cut that Con Ed did in certain lower Manhattan neighborhoods to protect underwater systems from flood damage.Olert said there were 250,000 customers without power in Manhattan. A customer represents a single meter, so the number of people actually affected is likely higher.The company shut off power in 200,000 homes in the area in last year's Hurricane Irene - but this year's storm packs a much fiercer punch.Atlantic Cityofficials were trying to rescue around 500 people trapped in their homes during the direct hit. Most of the city's 40,000 residents had evacuated as directed.Concern: Governor Andrew Cuomo (centre) inspects a deluge of water flooding the Battery Tunnel in Manhattan as Hurricane Sandy approaches New YorkCrash: A fallen tree with its roots ripped from the road and a power line lie over homes on Harvard Street in Garden City, New YorkHere it comes! Hurricane Sandy barrels into Cape May, New Jersey todayFerocious: The storm kicks off in Southampton, New York today as the brutal weather conditions bear down on the East CoastSaved: An elderly man is rescued by volunteer firemen in West Atlantic City, New Jersey, as the hurricane causes colossal damage to East Coast towns and citiesAll along the waterfront: A police car patrols the waterfront in Brooklyn, New York this evening as Sandy batters the Big AppleHere it comes: The waves rise in Edgewater, New Jersey as Hurricane Sandy lashes the East CoastLandfall: Ocean waves kick up near homes along Peggoty Beach in Scituate, MassachusettsMaking waves: Heavy surf crashes over a seawall during the early stages of Hurricane Sandy in Kennebunk, MaineThreatening: Rising water from the Hudson River overtakes a bank drive-through in Edgewater, New JerseyVicious: Waves crash against a previously damaged pier in Atlantic City, New Jersey before landfall of Hurricane Sandy before flooding communitiesWide open: A row of houses stands in floodwaters at Grassy Sound in North Wildwood, New Jersey as Hurricane Sandy pounds the East CoastTaken off: A trampoline becomes caught in the power lines on Norman Drive in Long Island as Hurricane Sandy gathers speedBeached: A boat washes ashore on Carson Beach as wind and waves from Hurricane Sandy hit the north-east coast of the USWintry scene: A student walks across the lawn at Davis & Elkins College as Hurricane Sandy brings heavy snow to Elkins, West Virginia
Flooding: A truck drives through water pushed over a road by Hurricane Sandy in Southampton, New York on Monday as the storm gathers speedRising: Pieces of the boardwalk float in sections through the flooded streets of Atlantic City - which is expected to get the brunt of the storm tonightIn Ocean City, New Jersey, residents snapped photos of the extreme flooding, as officials added: 'The ocean has met the bay. We have never seen anything like this.'Off the coast of North Carolina, the U.S. Coast Guard rescued 14 of the 16 crew members who abandoned the replica ship HMS Bounty, using helicopters to lift them from life rafts. The Coast Guard continued to search for the two missing crew members about 160 miles from the storm.The hurricane could cause a total of $20 billion in economic damage and losses to homes, travellers and retailers forced to close stores.Insured losses may reach $5 billion to $10 billion, or about half of the total, according to an estimate today by risk model provider Eqecat Inc., Bloombergreported.Sandy has already killed at least 66 people - including 51 in Haiti - in the Caribbean before pounding U.S. coastal areas with rain.Nine U.S. states have now declared states of emergency, with Connecticut most recently joining other eastern states and announcing it would shut down all highways at 1pm. The National Guard is poised to swoop into states to help.Caution: Obama warned the public to remain alert during a press conference in the White HouseOn its way: Hurricane Sandy is pictured churning off the east coast on Monday morning. The monster storm is expected to hit New Jersey Monday nightState of emergency: New Yorkers in Red Zone A face the highest risk of flooding from storm surges and Mayor Bloomberg ordered their mandatory evacuationDestruction: Long Island Power Authority personnel view a fallen tree limb suspended on a power line that fell as a result of the powerful windsWash out: Debris from a sea wall and a damaged pier litters a parking lot at Avalon Pier in Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina after Sandy's wind passed throughFelled: A broken tree is seen during winds as the Path Station starts to get flooded in Hoboken, New JerseyFlooded: People walk down a submerged street in Atlantic City, where the storm will hit land later on MondayIn deep: A photo uploaded to Twitter shows the catastrophic storm surge underway near Ocean City, New JerseyOn approach: A pedestrian crosses a vacant Market street with winds and rain from the hurricane in Philadelphia, PennsylvaniaHURRICANE SANDY BY NUMBERS50million People in Sandy's path66 Deaths already caused by Sandy across the Caribbean90 Miles per hour of wind gusts forecasted1,000 Miles wide that storm will reach as it barrels north on land9 States where state of emergency has been declared765,000 People already without power375,000 New Yorkers ordered to evacuate low lying areas of the city36 Hours Hurricane Sandy could batter the New York City - compared to 12 from Irene last year27 Years since the New York Stock Exchange closed for a day due to weather11 Feet of storm surges expected12 Inches of snow expected in some parts of North CarolinaPresident Obama warned the nation to brace itself as the hurricane churns north, with 50 million people in its path.'This is going to be a big storm,' he said in a press conference at the White House on Monday afternoon. 'It's going to be a difficult storm... We are certain this is going to be a slow-moving process through a wide swathe of the country and millions of people will be affected.'Please listen to what your state and local officials are saying. Do not delay, do not pause, do not question. For folks who are not following instructions, you are putting first responders at danger.'He added: 'The good news is we will clean up and we will get through this.'Forecasters said Sandy, dubbed 'Frankenstorm', could surge to a 'super storm' as it joins an Arctic jet stream, sparking flash floods and snow storms - and making it unlike anything seen over the eastern United States in decades.According to CBS Newshurricane consultant David Bernard, the pressure is dropping, which means the storm is strengthening. Its pressure is 943 millibars, setting a new lowest pressure north of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina and beating the previous low set in 1938.'The last time we saw anything like this was never,' Connecticut Governor Dannel Malloy said on Sunday. 'I don't know how to say it any clearer than that it is the largest threat to human life our state has experienced in anyone's lifetime.'New Jersey Governor Chris Christie added: 'Don't be stupid. Get out!'New York and other cities and towns have closed their transit systems and ordered mass evacuations from low-lying areas ahead of the storm surge.Airlines canceled flights, bridges and tunnels closed, and national passenger rail operator Amtrak suspended nearly all service on the East Coast.Classes were cancelled on Monday for more than two million public school students in New York, Philadelphia, Boston and Baltimore, while universities and government offices in states including Washington and New Jersey were shut down.Concerned residents in the hurricane's path swarmed grocery stores, searching for generators, flashlights, batteries and food in anticipation of power outages. Nearly 284,000 residential properties valued at $88 billion are at risk for damage, risk analysts at CoreLogic said.The National Hurricane Center warned that residents in higher floors will be at a greater risk than those nearer ground level when howling winds rattle through.The skies above New York begin to blacken as the first signs of the approaching megastorm formRaging waters: The New York City skyline and Hudson River are seen from Hoboken, New Jersey as Hurricane Sandy approachesBreaking through: As Hurricane Sandy barreled towards New York on Monday, the Hudson River breached, forcing water into Manhattan walkways and parks
Close up: The crane hangs precariously from the side of 157 W. 57th Street after wind has damaged it before the expected landfallSurveying the storm: Jack Devnew looks at the water covering a dock as he checks on his boat at a marina near downtown Norfolk, VirginiaAll U.S. stock markets will be closed on Monday and Tuesday, the operator of the New York Stock Exchange said, reversing an earlier plan that would have kept electronic trading going on.Sandy forced President Obama and Mitt Romney to cancel some campaign stops and fuelled concern it could disrupt early voting - encouraged by the candidates this year more than ever - before the November 6 election.The United Nations, Broadway theaters, New Jersey casinos, schools up and down the Eastern Seaboard, and myriad corporate events were also being shut down on Monday.Residents along the New Jersey coast were warned they may not survive Hurricane Sandy if they do not evacuate low-lying areas.The National Weather Service issued the stark warning last night as the massive weather front surged closer to the East Coast.A statement read: 'If you are reluctant [to evacuate], think about your loved ones...think about the rescue/recovery teams who will rescue you if you are injured or recover your remains if you do not survive.'Running for cover: A family braces against ocean spray as waves crash against a seawall in Scituate, Massachusetts on MondaySoaked: Homes in Ocean City in New Jersey are already submerged - hours ahead of the storm's expected arrivalDamage: Water pushed in by Hurricane Sandy surrounds a house in Southampton, New YorkRocky: Sailboats rock in choppy water at a dock along the Hudson River near Manhattan during the stormDesperate: Two boys run to dodge high winds and waves from the effects of Hurricane Sandy in Marshfield, MassachusettsHavoc: A car crushed by a fallen tree sits along Montauk Highway as Hurricane Sandy approaches in Bay Shore, New YorkUnder a cloud: After canceling his appearance at a campaign rally in Orlando, Florida, President Obama walks to the White House in the rainGOVT PLEA: AVOID CALLING ON CELL PHONES AND TEXT INSTEADAs Hurricane Sandy nears the East Coast, the Federal Emergency Management Agency took to Twitter to advise followers on how to use their cell phones in the storm.'Phone lines may be congested during/after Sandy. Let loved ones know you're OK by sending a text or updating your social networks,' it wrote.Voice calls use more bandwidth than text messages. By staying off the phone, it will reduce the unavoidable havoc to mobile carriers.About 50 million people from the Mid-Atlantic to Canada are in the path of the 1,000-mile-wide monster, which is expected to topple trees, damage buildings, cause power outages and trigger heavy flooding.Many workers planned to stay home on Monday, while thousands of flights into and out of the U.S. northeast were grounded on as airports closed, stranding passengers from Hong Kong to Europe.The massive storm threatens to bring a near halt to air travel for at least two days in a key region for both domestic and international flights.More than 11,500 flights have been cancelled so far - already leaving a backlog of tens of thousands.The storm is also expected to inflict power outages along the east coast, with officials already expressing fears that homes and businesses could be without power for days. 'We could be talking about weeks,' Connecticut Governor Dannel Malloy warned.Officials told residents to head for higher ground as evacuations were ordered on the East Coast including a mandatory one for New York City which saw Mayor Bloomberg advise 375,000 people to leave low-lying areas.Extremes: Snow covers Mountain Lake Road at an elevation of 4000 feet in Giles County, Virginia. About three inches of snow was measured in a snow gauge at a nearby hotel, the first snow fall of the year thanks to SandyViolent: Waves from Hurricane Sandy crash onto the damaged Avalon Pier in Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina as Sandy churns up the East CoastTreacherous: After checking to make sure his boat line is secure, Bob Casseday crosses the flooded street just over the bridge along Savannah Road in Lewes, Delaware on MondayThe New York subway closed at 7pm on Sunday for only the second time in history, meaning that almost 12million people will be prevented from taking their usual route to work.The MTA said the duration of the service suspension is 'unknown' and that 'service will be restored only when it is safe to do so, after careful inspections of all equipment and tracks.'More...
Transport officials warned: 'Even with minimal damage this is expected to be a lengthy process.'The New York Stock Exchange said on Sunday it is putting in place contingency plans and will announce later when the trading floor will reopen. It is the first time in 27 years the NYSE has been forced to close due to the weather.Ominous: A man watches the ferocious waves on Sunday in Berlin, MarylandNEW YORK'S WORST STORMS1821 HurricaneWithout modern technology, the hurricane on September, 1821 caught New Yorkers off guard when, in one hour, the tide rose 13 feet. The East River and Hudson River breached, with their waters meeting across Lower Manhattan. The area was not largely populated then, so there were few deaths1893 HurricaneA Category 1 hurricane completely destroyed Hog Island, a resort island in southern Queens1938 HurricaneNearly 200 people were killed when the Category 3 hurricane swept over Long Island and into New England. It caused millions of dollars of damages in NYC, where it killed 10 people and destroyed hundreds of trees in Central Park1954, Carol The hurricane, which had sustained winds of more than 100mph, hit eastern Long Island and caused major flooding throughout New York City1955, Connie and Diane Rain from the two hurricanes caused flooding across the city. There were more than 200 deaths in Pennsylvania, New York and New Jersey1960, Donna The hurricane created an 11-foot storm tide in the New York Harbor, inflicting extensive pier damage1972, Agnes The tropical storm flooded areas from North Caroline to New York and caused 122 deaths and more than $6 billion in damage1985, Gloria Serious damage was inflicted on Long Island1996, Bertha The tropical storm washed out the city in July 19661999, FloydThe tropical storm hit New Jersey and New York with 60mph winds and dropped up to 15 inches of rain. Flash flooding forced residents from their homes2011, IreneThe hurricane was downgraded to a tropical storm just before hitting the city, which had issued mandatory evacuation orders for those living along the coast. Up to 7 inches of rain fell as winds reached 65 mph. It inflicted an estimated $100 million in damagesNew York City and Nassau County Offices of Emergency ManagementA blizzard led to a late start and an early close on January 8, 1996. The NYSE shut down on March 27, 1985 for Hurricane Gloria. Since the Great Depression, the longest suspension in trading at the NYSE occurred after 9/11 when the exchange closed for four days.The sheer size of the storm meant its effects would be felt from the mid-Atlantic states to New England. Officials issued warnings meant to reduce the risk of mass casualties as the National Guard was deployed to New York City.All along the U.S. coast worried residents packed into stores, buying generators, candles, food and other supplies in anticipation of power outages.'They're freaking out,' said Joe Dautel, a clerk at a hardware store in Glenside, Pennsylvania. 'I'm selling people four, five, six packs of batteries - when I had them.'Mark Palazzolo, who has boarded up his bait-and-tackle shop in Point Pleasant Beach, N.J with the same wood he used in past storms, crossing out the names of Hurricanes Isaac and Irene, said: 'I think this one's going to do us in.'I got a call from a friend of mine from Florida last night who said, "Mark, get out! If it's not the storm, it'll be the aftermath. People are going to be fighting in the streets over gasoline and food."'Obama met with federal emergency officials for an update on the Category 1 storm's path and the danger it poses to the Mid-Atlantic and New England.'My main message to everybody involved is that we have to take this seriously,' said Obama. He urged people to 'listen to your local officials.'The President said emergency officials were confident that staging for the storm was in place.Obama traveled the nearly three miles from the White House to the Federal Emergency Management Agency's headquarters in his motorcade. As part of the briefing, the president also met with FEMA workers and thanked them.'My message to the governors as well as to the mayors is anything they need, we will be there, and we will cut through red tape.'We are not going to get bogged down with a lot of rules,' he said. 'We want to make sure we are anticipating and leaning forward into making sure that we have the best possible response to what is going to be a big and messy system.'The storm surge could be higher than the Manhattan flood walls and pour into subway tunnels.Mayor Bloomberg said he ordered an evacuation of the low-lying areas along the edges of the city including parts of lower Manhattan, sections of Brooklyn and Staten Island, and the Rockaways in Queens.He said 72 evacuation centres had been created around the city and he also ordered the closure of schools.Mayor Bloomberg said: 'If you don’t evacuate, you are not only endangering your life, you are also endangering the lives of the first responders who are going in to rescue you,' he said at a news conference Sunday. 'This is a serious and dangerous storm.'He added that those who didn’t leave wouldn’t be arrested. New York City police officers went door-to-door this evening to take down the names of those who had decided not to leave.To help direct any response to the damage caused by Sandy, Governor Andrew Cuomo has directed the New York Army and Air National Guard to mobilize in response to Hurricane Sandy.Cuomo said the Guard will deploy up to 1,175 troops starting on Sunday. They'll help local authorities respond to storm damage in New York City, Long Island, the Hudson Valley and the Southern Tier.On Sunday, 200 New York Army National Guard soldiers were deployed to New York City. By 6pm Monday, Cuomo said 250 soldiers and 150 airmen would be in place on Long Island.Another 200 soldiers will go on duty Monday at armories in Binghamton, Walton, and Horseheads in the Southern Tier. Statewide, another 150 soldiers and airmen will be mobilized to provide command and control and logistical support.Not a foam party: A brave news crew wades through sea foam blown onto Jeanette's Pier in Nags Head, N.C. as wind and rain from Hurricane Sandy move into the areaWrapped up: The sea foam blows across the walkway. The state is also expected to experience up to 12 inches of snow in some areasFacing the storm: Andy Becica, left, and Peter Wilson stand in rough surf along the Atlantic Ocean Monday morning in Cape May, New JerseyIf forecasts hold, and especially if the storm surge coincides with high tide, the effects should be much more severe for the city said Klaus Jacob, a Columbia University researcher who has advised the city on coastal risks.While the storm may not be the worst-case scenario, Jacob said he expected the subway system, as well as underground electrical systems and neighborhoods in Lower Manhattan, to be at least partially flooded.Governor Cuomo said: 'The transportation system is the lifeblood of the New York City region, and suspending all service is not a step I take lightly.'But keeping New Yorkers safe is the first priority, and the best way to do that is to make sure they are out of harm's way before gale-force winds can start wreaking havoc on trains and buses.'The service is expected to resume operations about 12 hours after the storm ends, officials said at the news conference - which would put services on track to resume for Tuesday afternoon.The Atlantic City Rail Line also suspended operations at 4pm Sunday due to the rapidly deteriorating weather conditions and the continued evacuation of Atlantic City.Closing in: A storm surge hits a small tree as winds from Hurricane Sandy reach Seaside Park in Bridgeport, Connecticut as the state declared a state of emergencyChaos: Waves crash over Winthrop Shore Drive in Massachusetts as Hurricane Sandy comes up the coastMonster: Waves crash over Eric Mongirdas as the storm surge caused by Hurricane Sandy pummels the coastline in Milford, ConnecticutThe measures announced in New York City come as governors from North Carolina to Connecticut declared states of emergency ahead of Sandy's arrivalAs Hurricane Sandy trekked north from the Caribbean to meet two other powerful winter storms, experts said it didn't matter how strong the storm was when it hit land.'This storm that is going to be impacting the mid-Atlantic and parts of the Northeast...is going to be destructive, historic, and unfortunately life threatening,' AccuWeather's Bernie Rayno said to ABC News.Insurers also prepared for the storm's arrival, activating claims teams, staging adjusters near the locations most likely to be affected and generally getting ready to pay for a potentially huge volume of losses.At high tide, it could bring a surge of seawater up to 11 feet above ground level to Long Island Sound and New York Harbor, forecasters said.Gusts: A woman tries to take cover from rain in Hoboken while Sandy approaches New Jersey with top sustained winds of 90mph'Given the large wind field associated with Sandy, elevated water levels could span multiple tide cycles, resulting in repeated and extended periods of coastal and bayside flooding,' the forecasters said.New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who was criticised for not interrupting a vacation in Florida while a snowstorm pummeled the state in 2010, broke off campaigning for Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney in North Carolina on Friday to return home.'I can be as cynical as anyone,' said Christie, who declared a state of emergency Saturday. 'But when the storm comes, if it's as bad as they're predicting, you're going to wish you weren't as cynical as you otherwise might have been.''Don't be stupid. Get out and go to higher, safer ground,' New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said on Sunday. 'Let's get to work on this. We know how to do this. We've been through this before.'Eighty-five-year-old former sailor Ray Leonard agreed. And he knows to heed warnings.STORM SURGE: HOW TO PREPARE FOR A NATURAL DISASTERNew York City’s Office of Emergency Management offers advice for what to do in case disaster strikes:
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