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VIDEO: Flash floods deluge towns in Pennsylvania and West Virginia, prompting rescues

Injury Insiders by Injury Insiders
April 12, 2024
in Personal Injury
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Emergency crews in parts of West Virginia and Pennsylvania waded through murky floodwaters to rescue residents as storms unleashed downpours that blanketed streets and gushed into homes and businesses Thursday night, officials said.The storms were part of a sweeping weather system that plunged parts of Florida underwater early Thursday morning, a day after it churned up multiple destructive tornadoes and brought flooding and widespread power outages across the Gulf Coast.Flash flood warnings stretched across western parts of West Virginia and Pennsylvania, including Pittsburgh Thursday night but were canceled early Friday morning as heavy rain tapered to showers.Heavy rainfall will target parts of New England Friday before the system exits the U.S. Saturday.Flash flood emergencies – the most significant flood alert possible – were issued in the western Pittsburgh suburbs of Oakdale and Coraopolis.Rescue crews were deployed in Oakdale Thursday evening looking for people who may need to be evacuated, sister station WTAE reported. At least seven people were rescued. Oakdale firefighters carried Janet Lee out of her home as a nearby creek started to overflow. Lee said her cellar was flooded from the creek water.Video below: Water rescues amid heavy rainfall, flash flooding in Western PennsylvaniaInside Pete Perri’s home was Eddie, an 8-year-old Havanese, who had to be brought out by firefighters. “He’s shaking a little bit. I don’t think he’s used to all this attention,” Perri said.In nearby Pittsburgh, emergency units rescued a woman who became trapped as her car began sinking in rising floodwaters, Pittsburgh Public Safety said. The city had received nearly 3 inches of rain Thursday, making it Pittsburgh’s wettest April day on record.The weather service also warned of life-threatening flash flooding of highways, streets and underpasses in several West Virginia counties, including Boone, Cabell and Jackson. Emergency crews in the area reported water rescues, the agency said.In South Charleston, West Virginia, video showed floodwaters blanketing roads and parking lots during torrential rain late Thursday.Video below: Flooding in Oakdale area; heavy rain on highwayThe storms brought damaging wind gusts to portions of the East in addition to heavy rainfall. More than 60,000 homes and businesses were without power Friday morning, down from a peak of nearly 120,000 Thursday night, according to PowerOutage.us. In Louisiana, which was hard-hit by storms Wednesday, 20,000 were still without power.Storms also produced tornadoes in Florida Thursday. A tornado damaged homes in at least one Florida neighborhood in an area north of St. Augustine late in the morning, St. John’s County fire officials said. Another tornado was observed just north of Tampa in the early afternoon.A flash flood emergency warning of life-threatening flooding was issued in the Tallahassee, Florida, area, where more than a month’s worth of rain fell in the city in just two hours early Thursday morning. The city sees 3.52 inches in a typical April, but over 7 inches fell there since Wednesday night.Multiple flash flood emergencies were issued on Wednesday, including in New Orleans, as incredibly moist storms deluged parts of Texas and Louisiana. The severe weather also struck Mississippi, leaving two people dead and damaging at least 179 homes, the state’s emergency management agency said.Wednesday and Thursday’s storms packed almost double the moisture found in typical spring storms in the region. The added moisture helped the storms to unload torrential, flooding rainfall.As the atmosphere continues to warm due to human-caused climate change it’s able to soak up more moisture like a towel and then ring it out in the form of more extreme gushes of rainfall, increasing the chance of flooding.Storms carve a path of destructionAs the storms bulldozed from Texas to Mississippi Wednesday, they left damage and destruction in their wake.At least five tornadoes occurred in Louisiana, Texas and Alabama Wednesday as the storms caused widespread power outages and damage to homes and businesses across parts of the Gulf Coast.Video below shows tornado touch down in North Florida, causing significant damageAt least 10 people were injured when an EF1 tornado ripped through Slidell, Louisiana, police said. Storms left city roads scattered with trees and power lines and rising water levels prompted first responders to organize water rescues, Slidell police spokesperson Daniel Seuzeneau said. Tornadoes also churned up in Saint Francisville and around Lake Charles, Louisiana, the National Weather Service said.Another EF1 tornado struck a stretch of businesses in the Houston suburb of Katy, Texas. No injuries were reported Wednesday, but the storm damaged a strip mall and a neighboring car repair shop, said National Weather Service meteorologist Jeffry Evans. Images show a large portion of the businesses’ roof collapsed into the parking lot and surrounded by rubble and metal debris.Video below: Louisiana family shows damage done inside their home by tornadoAcross Mississippi, more than 70 homes have been reported damaged or destroyed, the Mississippi Emergency Management Agency said Wednesday.Torrential downpours also triggered treacherous flooding in parts of Texas and Louisiana, where officials rushed to perform water rescues as roads turned to rivers.In New Orleans, water spilled into the streets as exceptional rainfall overwhelmed the city’s complex network of water pumps and other aging flood-mitigating infrastructure, the city’s Sewerage and Water Board said.New Orleans saw one of several daily rainfall records that were broken across the South on Wednesday. The city’s Louis Armstrong International Airport received 6.44 inches – almost triple its previous record.CNN’s Taylor Ward, Monica Garrett, Caroll Alvarado, Sara Smart, Rachel Ramirez, Jacob Lev, Rosa Flores, Sara Weisfeldt, Devon Sayers and Rebekah Riess contributed to this report.

Emergency crews in parts of West Virginia and Pennsylvania waded through murky floodwaters to rescue residents as storms unleashed downpours that blanketed streets and gushed into homes and businesses Thursday night, officials said.

The storms were part of a sweeping weather system that plunged parts of Florida underwater early Thursday morning, a day after it churned up multiple destructive tornadoes and brought flooding and widespread power outages across the Gulf Coast.

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Flash flood warnings stretched across western parts of West Virginia and Pennsylvania, including Pittsburgh Thursday night but were canceled early Friday morning as heavy rain tapered to showers.

Heavy rainfall will target parts of New England Friday before the system exits the U.S. Saturday.

Flash flood emergencies – the most significant flood alert possible – were issued in the western Pittsburgh suburbs of Oakdale and Coraopolis.

Rescue crews were deployed in Oakdale Thursday evening looking for people who may need to be evacuated, sister station WTAE reported. At least seven people were rescued.

Oakdale firefighters carried Janet Lee out of her home as a nearby creek started to overflow. Lee said her cellar was flooded from the creek water.

Video below: Water rescues amid heavy rainfall, flash flooding in Western Pennsylvania

Inside Pete Perri’s home was Eddie, an 8-year-old Havanese, who had to be brought out by firefighters. “He’s shaking a little bit. I don’t think he’s used to all this attention,” Perri said.

In nearby Pittsburgh, emergency units rescued a woman who became trapped as her car began sinking in rising floodwaters, Pittsburgh Public Safety said. The city had received nearly 3 inches of rain Thursday, making it Pittsburgh’s wettest April day on record.

The weather service also warned of life-threatening flash flooding of highways, streets and underpasses in several West Virginia counties, including Boone, Cabell and Jackson. Emergency crews in the area reported water rescues, the agency said.

In South Charleston, West Virginia, video showed floodwaters blanketing roads and parking lots during torrential rain late Thursday.

Video below: Flooding in Oakdale area; heavy rain on highway

The storms brought damaging wind gusts to portions of the East in addition to heavy rainfall. More than 60,000 homes and businesses were without power Friday morning, down from a peak of nearly 120,000 Thursday night, according to PowerOutage.us. In Louisiana, which was hard-hit by storms Wednesday, 20,000 were still without power.

Storms also produced tornadoes in Florida Thursday. A tornado damaged homes in at least one Florida neighborhood in an area north of St. Augustine late in the morning, St. John’s County fire officials said. Another tornado was observed just north of Tampa in the early afternoon.

A flash flood emergency warning of life-threatening flooding was issued in the Tallahassee, Florida, area, where more than a month’s worth of rain fell in the city in just two hours early Thursday morning. The city sees 3.52 inches in a typical April, but over 7 inches fell there since Wednesday night.

Multiple flash flood emergencies were issued on Wednesday, including in New Orleans, as incredibly moist storms deluged parts of Texas and Louisiana. The severe weather also struck Mississippi, leaving two people dead and damaging at least 179 homes, the state’s emergency management agency said.

Wednesday and Thursday’s storms packed almost double the moisture found in typical spring storms in the region. The added moisture helped the storms to unload torrential, flooding rainfall.

As the atmosphere continues to warm due to human-caused climate change it’s able to soak up more moisture like a towel and then ring it out in the form of more extreme gushes of rainfall, increasing the chance of flooding.

Storms carve a path of destruction

As the storms bulldozed from Texas to Mississippi Wednesday, they left damage and destruction in their wake.

At least five tornadoes occurred in Louisiana, Texas and Alabama Wednesday as the storms caused widespread power outages and damage to homes and businesses across parts of the Gulf Coast.

Video below shows tornado touch down in North Florida, causing significant damage

At least 10 people were injured when an EF1 tornado ripped through Slidell, Louisiana, police said. Storms left city roads scattered with trees and power lines and rising water levels prompted first responders to organize water rescues, Slidell police spokesperson Daniel Seuzeneau said.

Tornadoes also churned up in Saint Francisville and around Lake Charles, Louisiana, the National Weather Service said.

Another EF1 tornado struck a stretch of businesses in the Houston suburb of Katy, Texas. No injuries were reported Wednesday, but the storm damaged a strip mall and a neighboring car repair shop, said National Weather Service meteorologist Jeffry Evans. Images show a large portion of the businesses’ roof collapsed into the parking lot and surrounded by rubble and metal debris.

Video below: Louisiana family shows damage done inside their home by tornado

Across Mississippi, more than 70 homes have been reported damaged or destroyed, the Mississippi Emergency Management Agency said Wednesday.

Torrential downpours also triggered treacherous flooding in parts of Texas and Louisiana, where officials rushed to perform water rescues as roads turned to rivers.

In New Orleans, water spilled into the streets as exceptional rainfall overwhelmed the city’s complex network of water pumps and other aging flood-mitigating infrastructure, the city’s Sewerage and Water Board said.

New Orleans saw one of several daily rainfall records that were broken across the South on Wednesday. The city’s Louis Armstrong International Airport received 6.44 inches – almost triple its previous record.

CNN’s Taylor Ward, Monica Garrett, Caroll Alvarado, Sara Smart, Rachel Ramirez, Jacob Lev, Rosa Flores, Sara Weisfeldt, Devon Sayers and Rebekah Riess contributed to this report.

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About the Author

Yosi Yahoudai is a founder and the managing partner of J&Y. His practice is comprised primarily of cases involving automobile and motorcycle accidents, but he also represents people in premises liability lawsuits, including suits alleging dangerous conditions of public property, third-party criminal conduct, and intentional torts. He also has expertise in cases involving product defects, dog bites, elder abuse, and sexual assault. He earned his Bachelor of Arts from the University of California and is admitted to practice in all California State Courts, and the United States District Court for the Southern District of California. If you have any questions about this article, you can contact Yosi by clicking here.

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