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northeast ida death toll rises to 46 across new york new jersey pennsylvania maryland and connecticut historic storms leave cars stranded on highways and bodies are found in flooded basement apartments

The death toll from Hurricane Ida in the Northeast has risen to 46 across New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Connecticut, with pictures from the region showing cars stranded on highways as bodies are found in flooded basement apartments.

As the scale of the devastation is revealed in the Northeast, president Joe Biden will visit Louisiana on Friday to get a first-hand look at the destruction wrought by Ida that tore through the southern portion of the state and left 1 million people without power.

Biden will take an aerial tour of hard hit communities, including Laffite, Grand Isle, Port Fourchon and Lafourche Parish, before meeting with local leaders in Galliano, Louisiana, the White House said. 

Hurricane Ida struck the Gulf coast last weekend and carved a northern path through the eastern United States, culminating with torrential rains and widespread flooding in New York, New Jersey and surrounding areas on Wednesday. 

On Thursday, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said it has dispatched a surveillance aircraft to an area in Louisiana hard hit by Hurricane Ida that includes a refinery where an apparent oil spill has been reported. 

The fifth most powerful hurricane to strike the United States came ashore in southern Louisiana on Sunday, knocking out power for more than a million customers and water for another 600,000 people, creating miserable conditions for the afflicted who are also enduring suffocating heat and humidity.

At least nine deaths were reported in Louisiana, with another 46 killed as flash flooding and tornadoes hit the Northeast on Wednesday night.

'My message to everyone affected is: We're all in this together. The nation is here to help,' Biden said on Thursday. 

Among the dead is Don Bauer, a 65-year-old retired school bus driver who pushed his wife out of the back windshield of their Mazda SUV as it sank. His wife, Kate, clung to a tree for an hour before being saved but Don never made it out of the car. The couple were on their way home from their daughter's college volleyball game when the flash floods hit in Quakertown, Pennsylvania. 

In Monsey, New York, a rabbi died in his car after contacting his family and asking them to send help.  

The image above shows an aerial view of flooded streets in the Town of Bound Brook in New Jersey on Thursday

The image above shows an aerial view of flooded streets in the Town of Bound Brook in New Jersey on Thursday

The death toll in the Northeast United States from the remnants of Hurricane Ida rose to 46 on Thursday after the region was hit by record rains and dangerous floods. The image above shows Bound Brook, New Jersey on Thursday

The death toll in the Northeast United States from the remnants of Hurricane Ida rose to 46 on Thursday after the region was hit by record rains and dangerous floods. The image above shows Bound Brook, New Jersey on Thursday

President Joe Biden on Thursday approved a request from New Jersey's governor, Phil Murphy, to declare the Garden State a disaster area. Bound Brook, New Jersey is seen above on Thursday

President Joe Biden on Thursday approved a request from New Jersey's governor, Phil Murphy, to declare the Garden State a disaster area. Bound Brook, New Jersey is seen above on Thursday

Twins Rasmus and Peter Meyer Rader, 5, and their friend, Linus Bonet Demming, 4, explore a flooded area surrounding a park in Brooklyn on Thursday

Twins Rasmus and Peter Meyer Rader, 5, and their friend, Linus Bonet Demming, 4, explore a flooded area surrounding a park in Brooklyn on Thursday

The Manayunk neighborhood in Philadelphia is flooded on Thursday after the area was pounded by remnants of Hurricane Ida

The Manayunk neighborhood in Philadelphia is flooded on Thursday after the area was pounded by remnants of Hurricane Ida

Rabbi Shmuel Dovid Weissmandel was driving home from Monsey to Mount Kisco when the storms hit. He contacted his son, Moshe Eyal, and asked for help, saying he couldn't drive any further. Moshe updated his WhatsApp status and asked if anyone could help his father, but his body was found the next day. 

Biden will tour a neighborhood in LaPlace, a small community about 35 miles west of New Orleans that was devastated by flooding, downed trees and other storm damage, and deliver remarks about his administration's response. 

Officials who have flown over the storm damage reported astounding scenes of small towns turned into piles of matchsticks and massive vessels hurled about by the wind.

Edwards said he would present Biden with a long list of needs including fuel shipments as most of the area's refining capacity was knocked offline and mile-long lines have formed at gas stations and emergency supply distribution centers.

At Biden's direction, Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm on Thursday authorized an exchange of 1.5 million barrels of oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to Exxon Mobil to relieve fuel disruptions in the wake of the hurricane.

While Louisiana tries to recover from the storm, the New York area was still dealing with crippling floods from Ida.

People across large swaths of New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Connecticut spent Thursday coping with water-logged basements, power outages, damaged roofs and calls for help from friends and relatives stranded by flooding.

Flash flooding killed at least 46 people in the Northeast, including 23 in New Jersey alone and 13 in New York City as cleanup is underway from the 'historic' weather event that officials blamed on climate change. 

Biden approved an emergency declaration in the states of New Jersey and New York and ordered federal assistance to supplement state and local response efforts, the White House said late on Thursday. 

The National Weather Service said the ferocious storm pawned at least 10 tornadoes from Maryland to Massachusetts, including a 150-mph twister that levelled homes and toppled silos in Mullica Hill, New Jersey, south of Philadelphia.

'It just came through and ripped,' said Mullica Hill resident Jeanine Zubrzycki, 33, who hid in her basement with her three children as their house shook and lights flickered. 'And then you could just hear people crying,' said Zubrzycki, 33, whose home was damaged but remained livable.

Pictures from the census-designated neighbourhood showed that others were not so lucky, with some homes completely destroyed by the tornado, leaving nothing but piles of wood and brick.

The National Weather Service reported that debris from the destroyed homes and pulled into the tornado had reached the atmosphere, soaring around 23,000 feet into the air before landing miles away from the town.

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Several homes in Mullica Hill were destroyed as Ida's remnants caused a tornado to rip through the neighborhood, tearing off roofs and in some cases completely destroying the buildings, September 2, 2021

Several homes in Mullica Hill were destroyed as Ida's remnants caused a tornado to rip through the neighborhood, tearing off roofs and in some cases completely destroying the buildings, September 2, 2021

Ashley Thomas, right, is embraced by her mother Paula Menzoni Thursday, Sept. 2, 2021 after Thomas' home was severely damaged by a tornado in Mullica Hill, N.J

Ashley Thomas, right, is embraced by her mother Paula Menzoni Thursday, Sept. 2, 2021 after Thomas' home was severely damaged by a tornado in Mullica Hill, N.J

Several homes in Mullica Hill, New Jersey were destroyed or severely damaged Wednesday. Pictured: People stand among the ruin of a home destroyed in the tornado, September 2, 2021

Several homes in Mullica Hill, New Jersey were destroyed or severely damaged Wednesday. Pictured: People stand among the ruin of a home destroyed in the tornado, September 2, 2021

Houses, businesses and beaches are seen damaged at the entrance to Grand Isle at sunset after the town and barrier island was left devastated by Hurricane Ida as seen in this aerial image over Louisiana, U.S., September 2, 2021

Houses, businesses and beaches are seen damaged at the entrance to Grand Isle at sunset after the town and barrier island was left devastated by Hurricane Ida as seen in this aerial image over Louisiana, U.S., September 2, 2021

Biden will take an aerial tour of hard hit communities, including Laffite, Grand Isle (pictured on Thursday), Port Fourchon and Lafourche Parish, before meeting with local leaders in Galliano, Louisiana, the White House said

Biden will take an aerial tour of hard hit communities, including Laffite, Grand Isle (pictured on Thursday), Port Fourchon and Lafourche Parish, before meeting with local leaders in Galliano, Louisiana, the White House said

A boat damaged by hurricane Ida rests on its side in Leeville, Louisiana, U.S., September 2, 2021

A boat damaged by hurricane Ida rests on its side in Leeville, Louisiana, U.S., September 2, 2021

Pictured: A half-sunk boat is seen in the water in Leeville, Louisiana, U.S., September 2, 2021

Pictured: A half-sunk boat is seen in the water in Leeville, Louisiana, U.S., September 2, 2021

One resident told NBC Philadelphia that he watched his neighbors home being torn about while taking shelter with his wife and children.

'I heard the rumble and I seen stuff flying and I told my wife and kids to get in the basement,' he said. 'And I looked out the window and I seen their house going. First thing I did was run over to their house to make sure they were alright.' 

Glen Pickell told the network despite the tornado warnings, he didn't think there was anything to be worried about, telling his son: 'we don't get tornadoes.'

'We didn't think anything was going to happen then all of a sudden you hear the rumbling,' Pickell said. 'You look outside and it's like everybody get your butts in the basement. It didn't last that long. Maybe five minutes. But once it was over, it's crazy. You could see the damage it did.'   

Dramatic images from space taken both before and after remnants of Hurricane Ida blasted through the Northeast United States on Wednesday and dumped historic levels of rain show the scale of the devastation.

Flash flooding killed at least 46 people in the Northeast, including 23 in New Jersey alone and 13 in New York City as cleanup is underway from the 'historic' weather event that officials blamed on climate change.

The destructive flooding was felt in New Jersey, where satellite images showed a baseball stadium that is home to the New York Yankees minor league affiliate submerged in water.

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BEFORE AND AFTER: The satellite images above show TD Bank Ballpark, home of the Somerset Patriots, the New York Yankees' AA affiliate, in Bridgewater Township, New Jersey, on August 25 and on Thursday

BEFORE AND AFTER: The satellite images above show Memorial Parkway in New Brunswick, New Jersey on July 14, 2020 and Thursday

BEFORE AND AFTER: The satellite images above show homes and railroad lines in Manville, New Jersey as seen on August 25 and on Thursday

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BEFORE AND AFTER: The satellite images above show a residential neighborhood of Manville, New Jersey as seen on August 25 and on Thursday

TD Bank Ballpark in Bridgewater, home of the Somerset Patriots, saw the water level cover not just the baseball field but several rows of the stands as well.

The Patriots are the Yankees' AA affiliate.

Maxar Technologies on Thursday also released images showing the town of Manville, New Jersey both before and after torrential downpours left it completely flooded.

At least 23 people died in New Jersey, Governor Phil Murphy told reporters.

'The majority of these deaths were individuals who got caught in their vehicles,' he said.

Murphy on Thursday requested that President Joe Biden issue a major disaster declaration due to the impact from the remnants of Ida. Biden accepted the governor's request.

The New York Police Department said that out of 13 people who died in the city, one of them perished in a car and 11 in flooded basement apartments that often serve as relatively affordable homes in one of the nation´s most expensive housing markets. The victims ranged from the ages of 2 to 86.

Five people died in Pennsylvania; one in Maryland; and one in Connecticut. 

'Among the people MOST at risk during flash floods here are those living in off-the-books basement dwellings that don't meet the safety codes necessary to save lives,' lawmaker Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez tweeted.

A group of Navy recruiters based in Philadelphia who wished to not give their names help clear debris from the house of Ashley Thomas which was destroyed by a tornado in Mullica Hill, New Jersey on September 2, 2021

A group of Navy recruiters based in Philadelphia who wished to not give their names help clear debris from the house of Ashley Thomas which was destroyed by a tornado in Mullica Hill, New Jersey on September 2, 2021

Residents look at homes that were damaged by a tornado in Mullica Hill, New Jersey on September 2, 2021

Residents look at homes that were damaged by a tornado in Mullica Hill, New Jersey on September 2, 2021

A home damaged by a tornado is seen in Mullica Hill , New Jersey on September 2, 2021

A home damaged by a tornado is seen in Mullica Hill , New Jersey on September 2, 2021

A worker carries timber on a roof and begins the long process of fixing homes that were damaged by a tornado that touched down in Mullica Hill , New Jersey on September 2, 2021

A worker carries timber on a roof and begins the long process of fixing homes that were damaged by a tornado that touched down in Mullica Hill , New Jersey on September 2, 2021

Residents sort through damaged and destroyed items after a night of heavy rain and wind caused many homes to flood on September 2, 2021 in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City

Residents sort through damaged and destroyed items after a night of heavy rain and wind caused many homes to flood on September 2, 2021 in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City

A person carrying a bag of potatoes walks past a gas station in the Whitestone neighborhood of Queens that was heavily damaged after a night of extremely heavy rain and wind on September 2, 2021 in New York Cit

A person carrying a bag of potatoes walks past a gas station in the Whitestone neighborhood of Queens that was heavily damaged after a night of extremely heavy rain and wind on September 2, 2021 in New York Cit

A woman stands next to a car damaged by a downed tree in Corona, Queens, New York City, New York, USA, 02 September 2021 after the remnants of Hurricane Ida produced heavy rain and caused widespread flooding

A woman stands next to a car damaged by a downed tree in Corona, Queens, New York City, New York, USA, 02 September 2021 after the remnants of Hurricane Ida produced heavy rain and caused widespread flooding

Resident Daniel Zubrzycki walks with his family through debris cleared in the aftermath of a tornado in Mullica Hill, New Jersey on September 2, 2021

Resident Daniel Zubrzycki walks with his family through debris cleared in the aftermath of a tornado in Mullica Hill, New Jersey on September 2, 2021

A person cleans the porch of their house after a night of high winds and rain from the remnants of Hurricane Ida on September 2, 2021 in Mamaroneck, New York

A person cleans the porch of their house after a night of high winds and rain from the remnants of Hurricane Ida on September 2, 2021 in Mamaroneck, New York

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Rainfall from the remnants of Hurricane Ida submerge Barnes Field in Bristol, Connecticut on Thursday

Rainfall from the remnants of Hurricane Ida submerge Barnes Field in Bristol, Connecticut on Thursday

Cars are left stranded in flood water under a bridge on Thursday after the remnants of Hurricane Ida produced heavy rain and caused widespread flooding in New York City

Cars are left stranded in flood water under a bridge on Thursday after the remnants of Hurricane Ida produced heavy rain and caused widespread flooding in New York City

Members of the Lodi, New Jersey Fire Department perform water rescues of trapped residents following torrential rains from the remnants of Hurricane Ida on Thursday

Members of the Lodi, New Jersey Fire Department perform water rescues of trapped residents following torrential rains from the remnants of Hurricane Ida on Thursday

In the wake of Ida, the Schuylkill River crested above its banks, flooding the Philadelphia neighborhood of Manayunk on Thursday

In the wake of Ida, the Schuylkill River crested above its banks, flooding the Philadelphia neighborhood of Manayunk on Thursday

The image above from Thursday shows the view of a car damaged by a downed tree after the remnants of Hurricane Ida produced heavy rain and caused widespread flooding in New York

The image above from Thursday shows the view of a car damaged by a downed tree after the remnants of Hurricane Ida produced heavy rain and caused widespread flooding in New York

People navigate heavy rains and flooded walkways at the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadows, New York on Wednesday night

People navigate heavy rains and flooded walkways at the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadows, New York on Wednesday night

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'These are working class, immigrant, and low-income people & families,' she added. 

Three also died in the New York suburb of Westchester while another three died in Montgomery County outside Philadelphia in Pennsylvania, a local official confirmed.  

A Connecticut state police sergeant perished after his cruiser was swept away. 

Flooding closed major roads across New Jersey and New York boroughs including Manhattan, The Bronx and Queens, submerging cars and forcing the fire department to rescue hundreds of people.

At least 23 people died in New Jersey, Governor Phil Murphy told reporters.

'The majority of these deaths were individuals who got caught in their vehicles,' he said.

Murphy on Thursday requested that President Joe Biden issue a major disaster declaration due to the impact from  the remnants of Ida. Biden accepted the governor's request.

In New York City, Sophy Liu roused her son from bed and put him in a life jacket and inflatable swimming ring as their first-floor apartment flooded in Queens.

Unable to open the door against the force of the water, she called friends for help. The water was nearly 5 feet high when they came to her rescue, she said.

'I was obviously scared, but I had to be strong for my son. I had to calm him down,' she recalled Thursday as medical examiners removed three bodies from a home down the street. 

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Cars and trucks are stranded by high water on the Major Deegan Expressway in The Bronx on Thursday

Cars and trucks are stranded by high water on the Major Deegan Expressway in The Bronx on Thursday

Buses, UPS delivery trucks, and trailers stand idle on the Major Deegan Expressway in The Bronx on Thursday

Buses, UPS delivery trucks, and trailers stand idle on the Major Deegan Expressway in The Bronx on Thursday

A person who eventually waded to a truck moves amongst cars and other trucks that are stranded by high water on the Major Deegan Expressway in The Bronx on Thursday

A person who eventually waded to a truck moves amongst cars and other trucks that are stranded by high water on the Major Deegan Expressway in The Bronx on Thursday

The water nearly engulfs the stranded vehicles on the Major Deegan Expressway in The Bronx on Thursday

The water nearly engulfs the stranded vehicles on the Major Deegan Expressway in The Bronx on Thursday

Passersby watch as cars are left stranded on the Major Deegan Expressway in The Bronx on Thursday

Passersby watch as cars are left stranded on the Major Deegan Expressway in The Bronx on Thursday

The Major Deegan Expressway (above) was one of several New York City highways that were underwater on Thursday

The Major Deegan Expressway was one of several New York City highways that were underwater on Thursday

Sections of the FDR Drive in Manhattan, the Bronx River Parkway, and the Brooklyn Queens Expressway were also flooded. The Major Deegan Expressway in The Bronx is seen above

Sections of the FDR Drive in Manhattan, the Bronx River Parkway, and the Brooklyn Queens Expressway were also flooded. The Major Deegan Expressway in The Bronx is seen above

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Record rainfall, which prompted an unprecedented flash flood emergency warning for New York City, turned streets into rivers and shut down subway services as water cascaded down platforms onto tracks.

'I'm 50 years old and I've never seen that much rain ever,' said Metodija Mihajlov whose basement of his Manhattan restaurant was flooded with three inches of water.

'It was like living in the jungle, like tropical rain. Unbelievable. Everything is so strange this year,' he told AFP.

In another part of Queens, water rapidly filled Deborah Torres' first-floor apartment to her knees as her landlord frantically urged her neighbors below - who included a baby - to get out, she said.  

But the water rushed in so strongly that she surmised they weren't able to open the door. The three residents died.

'I have no words,' she said. 'How can something like this happen?'

Ida's remnants maintained a soggy core, then merged with a more traditional storm front and dropped an onslaught of rain on the Interstate 95 corridor, meteorologists said. 

Similar weather has followed hurricanes before, but experts said it was slightly exacerbated by climate change - warmer air holds more rain - and urban settings, where expansive pavement prevents water from seeping into the ground.

The National Hurricane Center had warned since Tuesday of the potential for 'significant and life-threatening flash flooding' and moderate and major river flooding in the mid-Atlantic region and New England. 

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People visit the flooded Bethesda Fountain in Central Park on Thursday after a night of extremely heavy rain caused by Hurricane Ida

People visit the flooded Bethesda Fountain in Central Park on Thursday after a night of extremely heavy rain caused by Hurricane Ida

New York City Parks Security Service officers on horseback explore the Greyshot Arch which is flooded in Central Park on Thursday

New York City Parks Security Service officers on horseback explore the Greyshot Arch which is flooded in Central Park on Thursday

Record rainfall was reported in Central Park on Wednesday. The park ended up getting 3.15 inches just in one hour, surpassing the previous recorded high of 1.94 inches in one hour during Tropical Storm Henri on August 21

Record rainfall was reported in Central Park on Wednesday. The park ended up getting 3.15 inches just in one hour, surpassing the previous recorded high of 1.94 inches in one hour during Tropical Storm Henri on August 21

Security officers on horseback wade through flood waters in Central Park's Greyshot Arch on Thursday

Security officers on horseback wade through flood waters in Central Park's Greyshot Arch on Thursday

The cleanup from the historic flooding is expected to take a while, according to local city and state officials

The cleanup from the historic flooding is expected to take a while, according to local city and state officials

The severity of the flooding is evident in the image above as the water level nearly reaches the horse's neck

The severity of the flooding is evident in the image above as the water level nearly reaches the horse's neck

A runner stops to look at high water at the Greyshot Arch which is flooded in Central Park on Thursday

A runner stops to look at high water at the Greyshot Arch which is flooded in Central Park on Thursday

A person takes a photo of flooded benches near Bow Bridge in New York City's Central Park on Thursday

A person takes a photo of flooded benches near Bow Bridge in New York City's Central Park on Thursday

Benches are seen submerged in Brooklyn on Thursday after the remnants of Ida brought drenching rain and the threat of flash floods and tornadoes

Benches are seen submerged in Brooklyn on Thursday after the remnants of Ida brought drenching rain and the threat of flash floods and tornadoes 

A slide is pictured at a flooded playground in the Brooklyn section of New York City on Thursday

A slide is pictured at a flooded playground in the Brooklyn section of New York City on Thursday 

Riya Rose, 4, and Caroline Weiner, 6, stop to look at a flooded playground in their Brooklyn neighborhood on Thursday

Riya Rose, 4, and Caroline Weiner, 6, stop to look at a flooded playground in their Brooklyn neighborhood on Thursday

Tiger Lily Koch, 10, is pictured with her brother, Adrien at a flooded playground in Brooklyn on Thursday

Tiger Lily Koch, 10, is pictured with her brother, Adrien at a flooded playground in Brooklyn on Thursday

An empty flooded playground is seen in the above photo taken in Brooklyn on Thursday

An empty flooded playground is seen in the above photo taken in Brooklyn on Thursday

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Still, New York Governor Kathy Hochul and New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said the storm's strength took them by surprise.

'We did not know that between 8:50 and 9:50pm last night, that the heavens would literally open up and bring Niagara Falls level of water to the streets of New York,' said Hochul, a Democrat who became governor last week after former Governor Andrew Cuomo resigned.

De Blasio, also a Democrat, said he'd gotten a forecast Wednesday of 3 to 6 inches of rain over the course of the day. 

'We're enduring an historic weather event tonight with record-breaking rain across the city, brutal flooding and dangerous conditions on our roads,' de Blasio said late on Wednesday.

State emergencies were declared in New York and New Jersey while the National Weather Service issued its first-ever emergency flash flood warning for New York City, urging residents to move to higher ground.

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Danny Hong shows where the water reached up to him as he shows the damage in his basement apartment on 153rd St. in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens, New York on Thursday

Danny Hong shows where the water reached up to him as he shows the damage in his basement apartment on 153rd St. in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens, New York on Thursday

A hole in the foundation where a window once was and flood waters rushed in is seen in a home on 153rd St. in the Flushing neighborhood of Queens

A hole in the foundation where a window once was and flood waters rushed in is seen in a home on 153rd St. in the Flushing neighborhood of Queens

A hole in the foundation where a window once was and flood waters rushed in is seen in the basement apartment on 153rd St. in the Flushing section of Queens

A hole in the foundation where a window once was and flood waters rushed in is seen in the basement apartment on 153rd St. in the Flushing section of Queens

Police officers use a yellow tarp to block the view as bodies are removed from a flooded basement apartment on Peck Avenue in Flushing, Queens on Thursday

Police officers use a yellow tarp to block the view as bodies are removed from a flooded basement apartment on Peck Avenue in Flushing, Queens on Thursday

The flood water line is seen just above glasses hanging over a sink in a basement apartment on 153rd St. in Flushing  on Thursday

The flood water line is seen just above glasses hanging over a sink in a basement apartment on 153rd St. in Flushing  on Thursday

Emergency service personnel work at the scene of a basement apartment where bodies were found on Peck Ave. in Flushing, Queens on Thursday

Emergency service personnel work at the scene of a basement apartment where bodies were found on Peck Ave. in Flushing, Queens on Thursday

Teresa Eng cleans out her bedroom in a her basement apartment in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens on Thursday

Teresa Eng cleans out her bedroom in a her basement apartment in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens on Thursday

Ragendra Shivprasad (left), the landlord of a building where some of the occupants were killed when several feet of water collapsed the wall to a basement apartment, stands with neighbors as they watch the scene in Queens on Thursday

Ragendra Shivprasad , the landlord of a building where some of the occupants were killed when several feet of water collapsed the wall to a basement apartment, stands with neighbors as they watch the scene in Queens on Thursday

A police officer stands guard as a man surveys the damage to a home in the Jamaica section of Queens on Thursday

A police officer stands guard as a man surveys the damage to a home in the Jamaica section of Queens on Thursday

Democratic candidate for New York City mayor Eric Adams (center) talks to reporters outside a home where people were killed when their basement apartment was flooded in the Jamaica neighborhood of Queens on Thursday

Democratic candidate for New York City mayor Eric Adams talks to reporters outside a home where people were killed when their basement apartment was flooded in the Jamaica neighborhood of Queens on Thursday

New York Mayor Bill de Blasio (center) and New York City Department of Environmental Protection Commissioner Vincent Sapienza (right) speak to a resident of the Jamaica section of Queens on Thursday

New York Mayor Bill de Blasio and New York City Department of Environmental Protection Commissioner Vincent Sapienza speak to a resident of the Jamaica section of Queens on Thursday

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'You do not know how deep the water is and it is too dangerous,' the New York branch of the National Weather Service said in a tweet.

The city's Central Park ended up getting 3.15 inches just in one hour, surpassing the previous recorded high of 1.94 inches in one hour during Tropical Storm Henri on August 21.

Wednesday's storm ultimately dumped over 9 inches of rain in parts of New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts and Rhode Island, and nearly as much on New York City's Staten Island.

In Washington, President Joe Biden assured Northeast residents that federal first responders were on the ground to help clean up.

As Ida's remnants hit New York, some highways flooded, garbage bobbed in streaming streets and water cascaded into the city's subway tunnels, trapping at least 17 trains and halting service until early morning. 

Videos online showed riders standing on seats in swamped cars. All riders were evacuated safely, officials said.

more videos

Popworld bouncer puts 41-year old father in a coma with one punch

2008: Rachel Nickell's parents say their lives have changed forever

Footage shows huge queues of passengers at Heathrow terminal 5

Police officer in hospital after a high speed pursuit car crash

Police open fire after stabbing inside New Zealand supermarket

Dalmatian shows puppy dog eyes after trashing family sofa

Fauci says the U.S. is 'keeping a very close eye' on variant

Met Office forecasting a warm and sunny Sunday for vast swathes of UK

Teenage kidnapping victim escapes through first-floor window

RAF crews talk about Operation Pitting evacuations in Afghanistan

Alex Phillips reveals her harrowing experience with revenge porn

Competitors pushed themselves to limits in ten-mile Tough Mudder

A man falls off his bike into a flooded street in Hoboken, New Jersey on Thursday on the morning after the remnants of Hurricane Ida drenched the New York City area

A man falls off his bike into a flooded street in Hoboken, New Jersey on Thursday on the morning after the remnants of Hurricane Ida drenched the New York City area

This handout picture courtesy of Dave Lucas shows the flooded area of Southwest Hoboken on Thursday

This handout picture courtesy of Dave Lucas shows the flooded area of Southwest Hoboken on Thursday

The image above shows flooded streets in Southwest Hoboken, New Jersey before dawn on Thursday

The image above shows flooded streets in Southwest Hoboken, New Jersey before dawn on Thursday

The remnants of Hurricane Ida triggered spectacular flash flooding and a rare state of emergency in New York City and other surrounding areas, including Hoboken (above)

The remnants of Hurricane Ida triggered spectacular flash flooding and a rare state of emergency in New York City and other surrounding areas, including Hoboken

New Jersey authorities said that 23 people died in the state. The death toll could rise. The image above shows Hoboken, New Jersey on Thursday

New Jersey authorities said that 23 people died in the state. The death toll could rise. The image above shows Hoboken, New Jersey on Thursday

Cars are left stranded at an intersection in Southwest Hoboken, New Jersey on Thursday

Cars are left stranded at an intersection in Southwest Hoboken, New Jersey on Thursday

A van drives through a flooded intersection in Southwest Hoboken, New Jersey early on Thursday morning

A van drives through a flooded intersection in Southwest Hoboken, New Jersey early on Thursday morning

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Dalmatian shows puppy dog eyes after trashing family sofa

Fauci says the U.S. is 'keeping a very close eye' on variant

Met Office forecasting a warm and sunny Sunday for vast swathes of UK

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RAF crews talk about Operation Pitting evacuations in Afghanistan

Alex Phillips reveals her harrowing experience with revenge porn

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At one Queens development, water filled the sunken patio of a basement apartment, then broke through a glass door, trapping a 48-year-old woman in 6 feet of water. Neighbors unsuccessfully tried for an hour to save her.

'She was screaming, 'Help me, help me, help me!' We all came to her aid, trying to get her out. But it was so strong - the thrust of the water was so strong,' said the building's assistant superintendent, Jayson Jordan.

Hundreds of flights were cancelled at LaGuardia and JFK airports, as well as at Newark, where video showed a terminal inundated by rainwater. 

In Elizabeth, New Jersey, near Newark Airport, four people died and 600 were left homeless from rain and river flooding in an apartment complex, Mayor J. Christian Bollwage said. 

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Footage shows huge queues of passengers at Heathrow terminal 5

Police officer in hospital after a high speed pursuit car crash

Police open fire after stabbing inside New Zealand supermarket

Dalmatian shows puppy dog eyes after trashing family sofa

Fauci says the U.S. is 'keeping a very close eye' on variant

Met Office forecasting a warm and sunny Sunday for vast swathes of UK

Teenage kidnapping victim escapes through first-floor window

RAF crews talk about Operation Pitting evacuations in Afghanistan

Alex Phillips reveals her harrowing experience with revenge porn

Competitors pushed themselves to limits in ten-mile Tough Mudder

A cone blocks off a flooded Van Buren Street in Newark, New Jersey on Thursday

A cone blocks off a flooded Van Buren Street in Newark, New Jersey on Thursday

An abandoned car is seen in flooded waters on Jefferson Street in Newark, New Jersey on Thursday

An abandoned car is seen in flooded waters on Jefferson Street in Newark, New Jersey on Thursday

Abilio Viegas attempts to fix his flooded van on South Street in Newark, New Jersey on Thursday

Abilio Viegas attempts to fix his flooded van on South Street in Newark, New Jersey on Thursday

South Street in Newark is desolate as the flood waters inundate the roadways on Thursday

South Street in Newark is desolate as the flood waters inundate the roadways on Thursday

Water is pumped out of the basement of a home on Clifford Street in Newark, New Jersey on Thursday

Water is pumped out of the basement of a home on Clifford Street in Newark, New Jersey on Thursday

Abandoned cars are seen in flood water on South Street in Newark on Thursday

Abandoned cars are seen in flood water on South Street in Newark on Thursday

Luis Armejo prepares a pipe to pump out water from out of his basement in Newark, New Jersey on Thursday

Luis Armejo prepares a pipe to pump out water from out of his basement in Newark, New Jersey on Thursday

A flooded Valero gas station is seen on South Street. New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy declared a state of emergency due to the flooding caused by Ida

A flooded Valero gas station is seen on South Street. New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy declared a state of emergency due to the flooding caused by Ida

A man walks through a flooded Clifford Street in Newark, New Jersey on Thursday

A man walks through a flooded Clifford Street in Newark, New Jersey on Thursday

South Street in Newark, New Jersey is inundated with flood waters on Thursday

South Street in Newark, New Jersey is inundated with flood waters on Thursday

A man walks through a flooded Van Buren Street in Newark, New Jersey on Thursday

A man walks through a flooded Van Buren Street in Newark, New Jersey on Thursday

Neighbors described hearing screaming from the complex at about 11pm as water flowed down the street, pushing dumpsters and cars around.

'Sandy had nothing on this,' resident Jennifer Vilchez said, referring to 2012's Superstorm Sandy.

Greg Turner, who lives in another part of the city, said his 87-year-old mother started calling 911 from the complex at 8pm when the water started rising in her apartment. 

High water kept him and his brother from getting to her.

The Schuylkill River exceeds its bank in the Manayunk section of Philadelphia on Thursday

The Schuylkill River exceeds its bank in the Manayunk section of Philadelphia on Thursday

At least three people died in the Philadelphia area as a result of the flooding, according to local authorities

At least three people died in the Philadelphia area as a result of the flooding, according to local authorities

Vehicles are under floodwater from Schuylkill River in the Manayunk section of Philadelphia on Thursday

Vehicles are under floodwater from Schuylkill River in the Manayunk section of Philadelphia on Thursday

The Schuylkill River rises and nearly breaches the Green Lane Bridge near the Manayunk section of Philadelphia on Thursday

The Schuylkill River rises and nearly breaches the Green Lane Bridge near the Manayunk section of Philadelphia on Thursday

The aerial view above shows the Schuylkill River overflowing its bank in the Manayunk section of Philadelphia on Thursday

The aerial view above shows the Schuylkill River overflowing its bank in the Manayunk section of Philadelphia on Thursday

Most of the Philadelphia region received between three and five inches of rain, though some areas saw as much as eight inches

Most of the Philadelphia region received between three and five inches of rain, though some areas saw as much as eight inches

Local authorities and meteorologists also reported several tornadoes in the region on Wednesday

Local authorities and meteorologists also reported several tornadoes in the region on Wednesday

Austin Ferdock drinks a beer while floating in floodwater that continues to rise over the submerged Vine Street Expressway in Philadelphia on Thursday

Austin Ferdock drinks a beer while floating in floodwater that continues to rise over the submerged Vine Street Expressway in Philadelphia on Thursday

People look at floodwater that continues to rise over the submerged Vine Street Expressway on Thursday

People look at floodwater that continues to rise over the submerged Vine Street Expressway on Thursday

The expressway, also known as Interstate 676, is completely underwater in Philadelphia on Thursday

The expressway, also known as Interstate 676, is completely underwater in Philadelphia on Thursday

The above aerial view shows the highway completely submerged by several feet of flood waters in Philadelphia on Thursday

The above aerial view shows the highway completely submerged by several feet of flood waters in Philadelphia on Thursday

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Police open fire after stabbing inside New Zealand supermarket

Dalmatian shows puppy dog eyes after trashing family sofa

Fauci says the U.S. is 'keeping a very close eye' on variant

Met Office forecasting a warm and sunny Sunday for vast swathes of UK

Teenage kidnapping victim escapes through first-floor window

RAF crews talk about Operation Pitting evacuations in Afghanistan

Alex Phillips reveals her harrowing experience with revenge porn

Competitors pushed themselves to limits in ten-mile Tough Mudder

The brown squares in the image above represent the flooded Vine Street Expressway in Philadelphia on Thursday

The brown squares in the image above represent the flooded Vine Street Expressway in Philadelphia on Thursday

The flood waters nearly rise to the overhead intersection of 22nd Street in Philadelphia on Thursday

The flood waters nearly rise to the overhead intersection of 22nd Street in Philadelphia on Thursday

Traffic is at a standstill in downtown Philadelphia as the city digs out from record rain on Thursday

Traffic is at a standstill in downtown Philadelphia as the city digs out from record rain on Thursday

As midnight approached, the water reached her neck, he said. Rescuers finally cut through the floor of the apartment above and pulled her to safety.

'She lost everything,' Turner said as he headed to a bank for money to buy his mother clothes and shoes.

In New Jersey's Milford Borough, authorities said they found a man´s body in a car buried up to its hood in dirt and rocks.

The ferocious storm also spawned tornadoes - at least seven, according to the National Weather Service. 

One split trees on Cape Cod, another tore off part of a high school roof in suburban Philadelphia and yet another ripped apart homes and toppled silos in Mullica Hill, New Jersey, south of Philadelphia.

'It just came through and ripped,' said resident Jeanine Zubrzycki, 33, who hid in her basement with her three children as the house shook and lights flickered. 

When the danger passed, they went upstairs and saw a neighbor's house had been destroyed.

'And then you could just hear people crying,' said Zubrzycki, 33, whose own home was damaged but liveable.

Record flooding along the Schuylkill River in Pennsylvania inundated homes, highways and commercial buildings, even as meteorologists warned that rivers likely won´t crest for a few more days. 

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2008: Rachel Nickell's parents say their lives have changed forever

Footage shows huge queues of passengers at Heathrow terminal 5

Police officer in hospital after a high speed pursuit car crash

Police open fire after stabbing inside New Zealand supermarket

Dalmatian shows puppy dog eyes after trashing family sofa

Fauci says the U.S. is 'keeping a very close eye' on variant

Met Office forecasting a warm and sunny Sunday for vast swathes of UK

Teenage kidnapping victim escapes through first-floor window

RAF crews talk about Operation Pitting evacuations in Afghanistan

Alex Phillips reveals her harrowing experience with revenge porn

Competitors pushed themselves to limits in ten-mile Tough Mudder

The image above shows homes and properties flooded in the town of Bridgeport, Pennsylvania on Thursday

The image above shows homes and properties flooded in the town of Bridgeport, Pennsylvania on Thursday

More properties suffered damage as a result of the flooding in Bridgeport, Pennsylvania on Thursday

More properties suffered damage as a result of the flooding in Bridgeport, Pennsylvania on Thursday

Bridgeport is a borough of Montgomery County. It lies about 18 miles north of Philadelphia on the Schuylkill River

Bridgeport is a borough of Montgomery County. It lies about 18 miles north of Philadelphia on the Schuylkill River

The above images shows an empty neighborhood of Bridgeport after it was flooded on Wednesday

The above images shows an empty neighborhood of Bridgeport after it was flooded on Wednesday

Two workers help clean Mates Brothers Auto Body in Bridgeport, Pennsylvania on Thursday

Two workers help clean Mates Brothers Auto Body in Bridgeport, Pennsylvania on Thursday

A car is almost completely submerged in the Pennsylvania town of Bridgeport on Thursday

A car is almost completely submerged in the Pennsylvania town of Bridgeport on Thursday

Flood waters leave cars stranded near a residential area of Bridgeport, Pennsylvania on Thursday

Flood waters leave cars stranded near a residential area of Bridgeport, Pennsylvania on Thursday

Natalie Kayl looks out the front door of her sister Jennifer Kayl's flooded home in Bridgeport, Pennsylvania on Thursday

Natalie Kayl looks out the front door of her sister Jennifer Kayl's flooded home in Bridgeport, Pennsylvania on Thursday

The image above shows another view of a flooded street in a residential area of Bridgeport, Pennsylvania on Thursday

The image above shows another view of a flooded street in a residential area of Bridgeport, Pennsylvania on Thursday

Surveillance aircraft sent to possible oil spill reported in wake of Ida

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said on Thursday it has dispatched a surveillance aircraft to an area in Louisiana hard hit by Hurricane Ida that includes a refinery where an apparent oil spill has been reported.

The aircraft dispatched from Texas will gather data on the Phillips 66 refinery and other priority sites, an EPA spokesman told Reuters.

'EPA's ASPECT aircraft' the Agency's airborne real-time chemical and radiological detection, infrared and photographic imagery platform â€' has been activated to support the state of Louisiana,' the spokesman said.

Phillips 66 said earlier that flooding had occurred at its Alliance Refinery and a sheen of unknown origin in some flooded areas of the refinery had been discovered.

'At this time, the sheen appears to be secured and contained within refinery grounds. Clean-up crews are on site. The incident was reported to the appropriate regulatory agencies upon discovery', the company said.

'A full post-storm assessment remains underway at the refinery. An investigation into the cause/origin of the sheen will be conducted. The refinery remains shut down', it added.

The Associated Press has also reported a possible spill near an offshore rig in the Gulf of Mexico after a review of aerial images of the disaster zone taken by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

The photographs appeared to show a miles-long brownish-black slick in the waters south of Port Fourchon, Louisiana.

The rig had Enterprise Offshore Drilling marked on its helipad. Enterprise Offshore Drilling said in a statement on its website that its rig had not suffered any damage or failure and that 'no environmental discharges had occurred from our facility'.

The U.S. Coast Guard told the AP it also had an aircraft fly over the refinery as well as to the Gulf of Mexico. The Coast Guard did not immediately respond to a request for comment late on Thursday.

Ida, one of the most powerful hurricanes ever to strike the U.S. Gulf Coast, made landfall on Sunday in Louisiana, destroying entire communities.

The Louisiana Oil Spill Coordinator's Office said that state regulators were still in the very early stages of responding to the environmental hazards brought by Ida.

Reporting by Reuters

The riverside community of Manayunk remained largely under water.

The Schuyilkill reached levels not seen in over 100 years in Philadelphia, where firefighters were still getting calls about minor building collapses and people stuck in flooded cars Thursday morning, Fire Commissioner Adam Thiel said. 

The managers of a 941-unit apartment complex near the river ordered residents to evacuate, citing 'deteriorating' conditions after water rushed into the parking garage and pool areas.

In suburban Bucks County, several firefighters had to be rescued after rushing floodwaters pinned a rescue boat against a bridge pier, state emergency management director Randy Padfield said.

Others were unable to escape the floods, including Donald Bauer, who was driving home to Perkiomenville after attending their daughter's volleyball game at DeSales University, near Allentown. 

The game had been moved up by two hours because of the weather.

State police Trooper Nathan Branosky said Bauer, 65, drowned in the car after helping his wife get out.

His wife is hospitalized, DeSales spokesperson Michael Corr said.

A flash flood warning continued into Thursday in New England, where authorities used boats to rescue 18 people from a neighborhood in Plainville, Connecticut, and 15 people - one in a wheelchair - from a complex in North Kingstown, Rhode Island. 

A road in Portsmouth, Rhode Island, crumbled.

In Frederick County, Maryland, first responders used a boat to rescue 10 children and a driver from a school bus caught in rising waters.

On Sunday, Ida struck Louisiana as the fifth-strongest storm to ever hit the US mainland, leaving 1 million people without power, maybe for weeks.

'We're all in this together. The nation is ready to help,' Biden said ahead of a trip Friday to the southern state of Louisiana, where Ida earlier destroyed buildings and left more than a million homes without power.

The US Open was also halted as howling wind and rain blew under the corners of the Louis Armstrong Stadium roof.

New Yorkers woke to clear blue skies Thursday as the city edged back to life but signs of the previous night's carnage weren't far away: residents moved fallen tree branches from roads as subway services slowly resumed.

Around 98,000 homes in Pennsylvania, 60,000 in New Jersey and 40,000 in New York were without power, according to the website poweroutage.us.

It is rare for such storms to strike America's northeastern seaboard and comes as the surface layer of oceans warms due to climate change.

The warming is causing cyclones to become more powerful and carry more water, posing an increasing threat to the world's coastal communities, scientists say.

'Global warming is upon us and it's going to get worse and worse and worse unless we do something about it,' said Democratic senator Chuck Schumer.

In Annapolis, 30 miles from Washington, a tornado ripped up trees and toppled electricity poles.

The NWS warned the threat of tornadoes would linger, with tornado watches in effect for parts of southern Connecticut, northern New Jersey, and southern New York as Ida tracked north through New England Thursday. 

more videos

Popworld bouncer puts 41-year old father in a coma with one punch

2008: Rachel Nickell's parents say their lives have changed forever

Footage shows huge queues of passengers at Heathrow terminal 5

Police officer in hospital after a high speed pursuit car crash

Police open fire after stabbing inside New Zealand supermarket

Dalmatian shows puppy dog eyes after trashing family sofa

Fauci says the U.S. is 'keeping a very close eye' on variant

Met Office forecasting a warm and sunny Sunday for vast swathes of UK

Teenage kidnapping victim escapes through first-floor window

RAF crews talk about Operation Pitting evacuations in Afghanistan

Alex Phillips reveals her harrowing experience with revenge porn

Competitors pushed themselves to limits in ten-mile Tough Mudder

Court staff clean the rain off the courts at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York on Wednesday

Court staff clean the rain off the courts at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York on Wednesday

more videos

Popworld bouncer puts 41-year old father in a coma with one punch

2008: Rachel Nickell's parents say their lives have changed forever

Footage shows huge queues of passengers at Heathrow terminal 5

Police officer in hospital after a high speed pursuit car crash

Police open fire after stabbing inside New Zealand supermarket

Dalmatian shows puppy dog eyes after trashing family sofa

Fauci says the U.S. is 'keeping a very close eye' on variant

Met Office forecasting a warm and sunny Sunday for vast swathes of UK

Teenage kidnapping victim escapes through first-floor window

RAF crews talk about Operation Pitting evacuations in Afghanistan

Alex Phillips reveals her harrowing experience with revenge porn

Competitors pushed themselves to limits in ten-mile Tough Mudder

more videos

Popworld bouncer puts 41-year old father in a coma with one punch

2008: Rachel Nickell's parents say their lives have changed forever

Footage shows huge queues of passengers at Heathrow terminal 5

Police officer in hospital after a high speed pursuit car crash

Police open fire after stabbing inside New Zealand supermarket

Dalmatian shows puppy dog eyes after trashing family sofa

Fauci says the U.S. is 'keeping a very close eye' on variant

Met Office forecasting a warm and sunny Sunday for vast swathes of UK

Teenage kidnapping victim escapes through first-floor window

RAF crews talk about Operation Pitting evacuations in Afghanistan

Alex Phillips reveals her harrowing experience with revenge porn

Competitors pushed themselves to limits in ten-mile Tough Mudder

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