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Henri Roars Ashore, Battering New England with Wind, Rain

Henri drove the ocean 1 to 2 feet higher as it made landfall near Westerly, Rhode Island, with top winds of 60 miles per hour. It was southeast of Hartford Connecticut at 5 p.m. local time, lumbering along at 7 miles an hour, according to the National Hurricane Center.

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A person walks on a flooded road during Tropical Storm Henri on August 22, 2021 in Westerly, Rhode Island. As heavy rain and flooding swept the region, a federal storm warning was declared in parts of New England after Hurricane Henri was downgraded from a Category 1 hurricane to a tropical storm on Sunday morning. (Scott Eisen/Getty Images/TNS)
Scott Eisen/TNS
(TNS) - Tropical Storm Henri, downgraded at sea from a hurricane, is soaking the U.S. Northeast with rain after it came ashore in Rhode Island. The storm is leaving a trail of power outages and flooded roadways from New Jersey to Massachusetts.

Henri drove the ocean 1 to 2 feet higher as it made landfall near Westerly, Rhode Island, with top winds of 60 miles per hour. It was southeast of Hartford Connecticut at 5 p.m. local time, lumbering along at 7 miles an hour, according to the National Hurricane Center.

“While New Englanders are used to dealing with some tough weather, this storm has the potential for widespread consequences throughout the region, with significant flooding and power outages,” President Joe Biden said at a news conference at the White House. “We don’t know the full extent of the storm’s impact today, but we’re acting to prepare for and prevent damage as much as possible.”

Henri is the latest in a grim parade of extreme weather events worldwide as climate change takes hold. Massive wildfires have blackened huge swaths of California, Greece, Algeria and Siberia, sending smoke over the North Pole for the first time on record. July was the hottest month ever recorded on Earth.

And in a separate major event, heavy rain fell across western and central Tennessee late Friday into Saturday, dropping as much as 17.02 inches in McEwen, a small town west of Nashville, said Brian Hurley, a senior branch forecaster at the U.S. Weather Prediction Center. At least 22 people died in the resulting floods, according to The Associated Press.

Henri is the fifth storm to hit the U.S. in 2021 and the eighth to form in the Atlantic. Henri is expected to linger across southern New England bringing as much as 6 inches of rain to a landscape that has been drenched by weeks of downpours. It will then sweep across southern Maine and head for the Canadian Maritimes.

Flooding has been reported across the Northeast, disrupting transportation. Amtrak canceled trains between New York and Boston. Some subway tunnels were inundated in New York City. And about 1,000 flights were canceled as of 11 a.m., mostly in Boston and Newark, New Jersey, according to Flight Aware, an airline tracking service.

More than 125,000 homes and businesses are without power across the region, according to Poweroutage.us, which tracks outages. More than 13,500 utility workers from dozens of states are on standby to help restore power, according to the Edison Electric Institute, a utility trade group.

As early as Sunday morning, Henri was still a hurricane, with top winds of 75 mph. But it lost power on its final approach.

“It didn’t come in as ferocious as predicted,” said Jim Rouiller, lead meteorologist at the Energy Weather Group. “I was expecting a bit more out of it but it really hasn’t materialized.”

A continental storm coming across Pennsylvania seems to have sapped some of Henri’s energy and moisture, Rouiller said. It also helped slow Henri down as it crossed an area of cooler water that robbed it of its strength.

Hurricanes and tropical storms depend on warm ocean water to build power and maintain strength. The cooler water has just the opposite effect and that could mean that the feared flooding and power outage won’t be as bad.

But flooding could still be severe, and officials braced for the worst.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Saturday declared a state of emergency, and thousands of residents and holiday-makers evacuated beach communities — or in some cases, opted to hunker down. A mandatory evacuation order was issued for some residents nearest the coast in Madison, Connecticut, across Long Island Sound.

Biden approved emergency declarations for Rhode Island, Connecticut and New York and ordered federal assistance. He authorized the Department of Homeland Security and the Federal Emergency Management Agency to coordinate all disaster relief efforts.

The Coast Guard ordered ports in Southeastern New England to shut, and established a safety zone for the Port of Narragansett, Mount Hope, Buzzards Bay, and Cape Cod Bay. In New York and New Jersey, authorities will implement vessel traffic control measures and limit movement.

Henri probably won’t produce anywhere near the $77 billion in damages that Superstorm Sandy caused in 2012, but it poses a significant threat to transportation and power networks, and is set to unleash potentially deadly storm surges.

The winds, rain and surge damage could reach at least $1 billion in losses, said Chuck Watson, a disaster modeler with Enki Research. Many of those costs will be absorbed by residents, who will make repairs themselves or because the damage won’t reach insurance deductibles. Insured losses will probably top out at $500 million, he said.

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