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Hurricane Irene Leaves New England Homeowners, Towns Stranded

JOHN CURRAN   08/30/11 09:05 PM ET   AP

NEWFANE, Vt. — 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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NEWFANE, Vt. — 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...
NEWFANE, Vt. — 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...
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12:24 PM on 08/31/2011
The Green Mountain boys working it out again! Way to people!




(Screw Eric Cantor)
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vtmilitia
Vermont ain't flat.
12:13 AM on 09/01/2011
Rumors coming in of cargo cults forming after water came from the bellies of helicopters today. Locals say those involved are flatlanders from out of state urban areas. Reports also tell of an early deer season since fish and game can't get down back roads.
11:57 AM on 08/31/2011
All this fuss about Vermont, we here in New Hampshire had issues too. The whole shopping area of West Lebanon ,NH was under 6 to 8 feet of water, business's devastated, people out of work, etc. No reporting on that only because we set to work repairing and the Vermont people started Whinning.
Jimsoutside
Work in progress
06:42 PM on 08/31/2011
Ummm...who's whining?
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vtmilitia
Vermont ain't flat.
12:08 AM on 09/01/2011
You could always shop in White River Junction,but you'd have to pay 6% sales tax.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ttigerlilyx2
11:10 AM on 08/31/2011
Wow, these Vermonters seem to have the rare and valued commondity of good sense!
Not whining and crying and blaming someone for the way bad things just happen sometimes.
You can't lose the capacity to deal with disasters or you become helpless and victimize yourself.
Best wishes to all of those struggling with this mess!
Hope everything gets back to normal for them as soon as possible.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Awilda VelezRodriguez
10:56 AM on 08/31/2011
Anyone who has no sympathy for anyone during disasters regardless of damage, has no heart. Whether Irene was one strong hurricane or not and whether people cry is not reason for laugh. Everyone in the USA has gone through a disaster at one time or another (some more than one(, this is not the time to be mean or less sympathetic to anyone. This is the time to thank that Irene did not touch your back yard, your home, or your city. May God bless those who are less fortunate than we and May God bless America.
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mopsy1
10:35 AM on 08/31/2011
40 human beings are dead and millions in property (income and job producing assets) have been destroyed despite the excellent prepartion of the government at several levels and the cooperation of residents. Do any of you who have to check first with Limbaugh about how you should feel--grasp that such natural disasters are disasters to the country as a whole and not just to the people directly affected? Do any of you understand that, no matter where you live, natural disasters can strike you and yours too? This was a case where death and damage could easily have been worse had FEMA and governors, etc not been calm and prepared. Are you slugs who whine about everything EVER grateful for anything?
10:08 AM on 08/31/2011
Living in Florida and going through Hurricane ANDREW a catagory 5 storm.....I got no sympathy for these folks sorry....this IS what a hurricane is all about!!!! Stop the whinning. This is what happens and really...the flooding was the wrost part of it for all of you. Hurricane Irene was ONLY a catagory 1 storm!!!! You should have lived through Hurricane ANDREW....then you could be whinning and complaining. I have gone through so many hurricanes and this is what happens. DEAL WITH IT! I went FIVE LONG WEEKS WITH NO ELECTRICITY AFTER ANDREW. NOBODY COULD GET TO US. THE ROADS WERE CLOSED. NO GAS. NO FOOD. AND WORSE...YOU HAVE NO IDEA HOW BAD IT REALLY CAN GET. ALL HOMES WERE DESTROYED..ALL OF THEM! NOT ONE WAS NOT DESTROYED! NO TREES LEFT, NOT EVEN A LEAF! And, it was as if a bomb had been dropped on Homestead....YOU REALLY HAVE NO IDEA ABOUT HURRICANS OBVIOUSLY until you live through a CATAGORY FIVE HURRICANE. You have to suck it up and make the best of it..that is all you can do!!!
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Risky Rich
11:11 AM on 08/31/2011
Tell us how you really feel.
Jimsoutside
Work in progress
06:34 PM on 08/31/2011
Well, we here in Vermont had sympathy for all of you folks when Hurricane Andrew hit Florida. It's not necessary for you to return that. We have sympathy for others who've experienced trauma because that's the kind of people we are here in Vermont. And we help each other out in time of need...because that's the kind of people we are here in Vermont.
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vtmilitia
Vermont ain't flat.
12:16 AM on 09/01/2011
Widja on that,Boi the Jesus.
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mykittywinks
You get what you get here...
10:07 AM on 08/31/2011
I am so sick of people who think everyone else owes them something.
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Johngy
Banned for what???
09:48 AM on 08/31/2011
The Katrina victims are crying for you now.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
smp276dp
free us from the craziness
09:25 AM on 08/31/2011
I feel no sympathy for those that want to live exculsive of the rest of us common folk. They think this is bad we have no idea what is too come. Living by the water has already proven to be a huge mistake. In my opinion that mistake will multiply.
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ickymcpooh
yes I get it my grammur is bad and I cant spell.I
10:06 AM on 08/31/2011
Thats just mean.No wonder they want to be away from people.
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Bruce Tucker
10:40 AM on 08/31/2011
You consider yourself a "common folk" ;;;;seems as though you have a self-image problem. Try therapy.
09:25 AM on 08/31/2011
I bet now they wish they hadn't traded in their 4 wheel drive SUV for an electric car.
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Michael Godwin
Hypocrisy detector
10:07 AM on 08/31/2011
FANNED!!!
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palinsnuts
09:07 AM on 08/31/2011
So, dig out.
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08:15 AM on 08/31/2011
Kind of senseless to stay on an island when told to evacuate ,or did they not understand ?People like them put others in danger trying to rescue them .
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09:25 AM on 08/31/2011
guess you didnt real the article. these are not island towns. i live in vermont and we were not given the order to evecuate. get your facts straight before you start popping off about things you clearly have no idea about.
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Michael Godwin
Hypocrisy detector
10:11 AM on 08/31/2011
But come on....stranded? LOL ...guess you don't know how to rebuild roads anymore? How about, temporarily inconvenienced....I can buy that headline. Just didn't see anything but some road damage...
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10:38 AM on 08/31/2011
Show me one article where it ordered citizens to stay .
06:54 AM on 08/31/2011
Were there "SHOOT TO KILL" orders like there was when Katrina happened. Oh and I bet there was NO Looting and why were the people not asked to go to the NEAREST SUPERDOME?
Seems like this was all about "helping people". Only they had to be the right "color"
07:28 AM on 08/31/2011
Um, sorry but those conditions simply don't exist here. People here are cleaning up the mess and taking action to help each other out. The government is doing the same things it did during Katrina, but these are different people. I don't even understand what you are trying to say in your post, just like you don't understand the world in which you live.
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nannymel
Mean what you say and say what you mean
09:04 AM on 08/31/2011
no one is looting or acting crazy. Plus, we all listened when the governor said it was a bad storm and that we should prepare. When he asked people to leave, most listened. This isn't about color, it's about supporting each other as a community and and listening.
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Joe Mando
Oh say...Can you see?
06:11 AM on 08/31/2011
The developers who clear-cut swaths of forest to build those McMansions on the hillsides should be chipping-in for the cost of all this "historic, epic" water damage caused by their blatant disregard for the wetlands and trees...and for not building proper drainage systems when they upset the ecosystems.
08:57 AM on 08/31/2011
you don't have one single shred of evidence to back up that statement. Land developers are crucified putting a new project on the record & by stringent inspections do every single thing required of them. This flooding would have occurred no matter what steps were taken with water making it's way from the highlands to the lower tributaries the fastest way imaginable..
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ccalde1961
10:12 AM on 08/31/2011
Actually the evidence of the having 100 year flooding on the Delaware river ever couple years or less now days is proof of over building and over paving of ground that once used to absorb rain water. I've seen in my own community swamp areas that for over 200 years no one would build on, until now. Lately builders come along build up a swamp,put homes on it, then when the wet weatther comes along people that have never had water problems in adjacent areas are swamped ~ meanwhile the builder is long gone, his pockest full of money. and as far as stringent inspections etc. is all taken care of by money ~ grease the right palm and you can get waya with anything. Sad but true.
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palinsnuts
09:08 AM on 08/31/2011
BS
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2tru4u2c
Politically correct is neither!!
06:02 AM on 08/31/2011
Lotsa strange and somewhat unrelated posts here. Makes one wonder what ever happened to human compassion. Too mant people saying " That was way less than..." or "That storn in 19__ was way worse than this one and..." Very confusing and very sad, indeed. Godspeed to all of the victims of this reagedy.
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2tru4u2c
Politically correct is neither!!
06:12 AM on 08/31/2011
....sorry for the typo, suposed to say "tragedy", not reagedy.
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Michael Godwin
Hypocrisy detector
10:14 AM on 08/31/2011
Victims?????? Stranded?????? The word "victimized" has become so diluted it holds no meaning anymore. Pardon the pun on diluted.