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More storms to pummel the East, bringing heat relief but flooding concerns
By Christopher Cann, USA TODAY,
5 hours ago
Parts of the central and eastern U.S. on Thursday were recovering from storms that barreled through the region this week, knocking out power, triggering evacuations and causing multiple deaths as more thunderstorms were expected to lash the East and provide a respite from a stretch of dangerous heat.
Forecasters with the National Weather Service said strong thunderstorms were expected to hit the mid-Atlantic region throughout the latter half of the week as they move east from the Ohio and Tennessee River valleys. Major cities including Philadelphia, New York City and Newark, New Jersey, will see scattered showers and bouts of heavy rain on Thursday and Friday, according to the Storm Prediction Center .
The storm's most intense conditions are forecast to lash the southern mid-Atlantic, including Virginia and the Carolinas, where flood watches were active. The main hazards associated with the thunderstorms include frequent lightning, strong wind gusts, hail and a "minimal threat of tornadoes," the weather service said .
Rain could fall at rates of 2 to 4 inches per hour across northern North Carolina and southeastern Virginia, according to the weather service .
The rain, especially across the mid-Atlantic, will come as a relief to millions as cooler temperatures are expected to set in after days of heat that pushed temperatures in Washington D.C. to 100, while the mercury reached the mid-to-upper 90s in New York and Philadelphia.
Nearly 70,000 homes and businesses on Thursday were without power across Upstate New York and parts of Pennsylvania and Maryland, according to an outage tracker maintained by USA TODAY . Counties in central Illinois and throughout Indiana reported 33,000 outages.
On Tuesday, a barrage of intense storms moved over the region, destroying buildings, uprooting trees and leaving over 100,000 utility customers in the dark across Pennsylvania, Virginia and New York, where Gov. Kathy Hochul declared a state of emergency .
Homeowners clean what they can in Rome, N.Y., on July 17, 2024. Daniel DeLoach/Utica Observer-Dispatch
In Canastota, a village about 25 miles east of Syracuse, one person was killed as a result of the storms, officials said. Meanwhile, a tornado with peak winds of 135 mph tore across the city of Rome , ripping off roofs and snapping trees. Mayor Jeffrey Lanigan said in a news conference that the city "looks like a war zone."
In the Midwest, storms spun up at least 11 tornadoes while a deluge turned roads into rivers. The heavy rain pushed a dam in Nashville, Illinois to "imminent failure," and about 200 people were evacuated . The immediate safety concern passed after the rain stopped, but the dam will require repairs, according to the Army Corps of Engineers.
In a rural part of the state, at least two people were found dead after floodwaters washed away their car.
Flooding in Arkansas triggers dozens of evacuations
On Wednesday, the dangerous weather stretched into Arkansas, where parts of the state were inundated with nearly a foot of rain in a few hours, raising rivers above their flood table and spurring flash floods that forced officials to issue evacuation orders and rescue operations.
At least eight counties across the state reported flood impacts, including evacuated apartment buildings, a senior living facility and flooded roadways.
The Creekside Health and Rehabilitation Senior Facility facility in Yellville, a city in northern Arkansas, reported more than 80 people had to flee because of flooding before being taken to a county community center, according to a statement from the Arkansas Division of Emergency Management .
To the East, 30-40 people in the city of Flippin evacuated from their homes, the emergency management division said. In Greenbrier, north of Little Rock, an apartment complex reported that over 30 residents had to flee because of flooding. The severe weather has mostly subsided across Arkansas, though some rivers on Thursday were still above their flood table.
Contributing: Cybele Mayes-Osterman, Thao Nguyen, USA TODAY
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