New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

New Haven, others wary of flooding in the storms’ wake

- By Ben Lambert and Brian Zahn

NEW HAVEN — New Haven officials asked residents to maintain situationa­l awareness Monday as the remnants of Tropical Storm Henri moved through the region, as area towns kept a close eye on local flooding as rain continued to fall.

The National Weather Service issued a flood watch through 2 a.m. Tuesday, according to to Emergency Management Director Rick Fontana.

“We are prepared with crews

water covering the lanes, according to National Weather Service reports.

On Monday, the state Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection had crews monitoring dams to ensure they could withstand additional water.

The Connecticu­t National Guard kept high-wheeled evacuation teams stationed at nine armories across the state on Monday to respond to the latest threat from Henri.

“We are being diligent ... until the storm truly passes,” Adjutant Gen. Francis Evon said in an appearance with Lamont in Norwich. Teams had previously been stationed in eastern Connecticu­t and along the shoreline, but shifted west to respond to potential flooding along the Interstate 84 corridor, he said.

The track of the storm proved to limit Henri’s damage. While still a Category 1 hurricane in the Atlantic Ocean, the storm started to track farther east.

The storm, forecaster­s said, then hit some cold water and lost strength. It was downgraded to a tropical storm before Henri’s center made landfall in

Rhode Island, where Lamont said outages were nearly triple what Connecticu­t saw when it hit land.

Wind speeds were high in Rhode Island, with reports of gusts of 70 mph at Point Judith. The winds quickly lost strength and were about 50 mph when it moved into Connecticu­t. By the time the storm reached central Connecticu­t, winds were about 40 mph.

Much of the tree damage from winds was limited to eastern Connecticu­t, according to weather service reports. But the storm still packed powerful rain that spread throughout Connecticu­t.

While many towns and cities along the coast saw between 1 and 2 inches of rain from the storm, central and western Connecticu­t saw dramatical­ly higher amounts.

Near Hartford, and other towns like Manchester and South Windsor, saw about 5 inches of rain Monday.

The storm came as Connecticu­t has been experienci­ng total precipitat­ion this summer that is well above average. In July, most of Connecticu­t got about 6 inches more rain than in a typical year. Already in August, some parts of Connecticu­t have seen about 5 inches more rain than usual.

Much of that has fallen in less than a week between steady rain from the remnants of Tropical Storm Fred last week and then Henri.

While heavy rains proved to be one of the most prolonged issues in Connecticu­t, much of the focus when the storm was heading toward Connecticu­t was on power outages.

Overall outages fell well below estimates from the power companies. Eversource, the state’s largest power company, made quick work of 60,000 outages during the storm.

By Monday afternoon, they had restored all but 1,800 outages, and most were expected to be cleared up by Tuesday. Eversource officials cautioned that some outages would take additional time given their complexity.

“The last outages of a large restoratio­n like this are labor intensive and time consuming. We’re also watching the forecast with an eye on the additional thundersto­rms expected [Monday],” said Craig Hallstrom, president of regional electric operations for Eversource. “These could cause more outages that our team will address as quickly and safely as possible until every home and

business in the state has power back.”

United Illuminati­ng, which provides powers to portions of Fairfield and New Haven counties, did not experience a surge of outages, given the new track of the storm.

Reflecting on the initial response to the storm, Lamont said much has changed since last year, which saw a tropical storm quickly sweep through Connecticu­t and cut power to 800,000 people.

“The decision making was not centralize­d, it was decentrali­zed . ... I think that made a big difference in having twice as many people on the ground, deployed and ready to go,” Lamont said.

There were emergency operations centers across the state that, Lamont said, had direct connection­s to the power and telecommun­ications companies.

“It’s really important that utilities know that electricit­y is absolutely life giving. Last time was tough, power was out four, five, six days,” Lamont said, referencin­g last summer’s tropical storm. “You’ve got generators that are running out of juice . ... They’ve got to realize how absolutely vital it is we get this stuff up within 72 hours. Don’t underestim­ate the storm, overestima­te it, so you’re prepared.”

 ?? Peter Hvizdak / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Michael Kavanaugh of Branford and his dog Missy take their daily walk on Harbor Street at Branford Point on Monday.
Peter Hvizdak / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Michael Kavanaugh of Branford and his dog Missy take their daily walk on Harbor Street at Branford Point on Monday.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States