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Effects of Hurricane Floyd in New Jersey

Hurricane Floyd in 1999 was the costliest natural disaster in New Jersey's history, until it was surpassed by Hurricane Irene in 2011. Damage in the state totaled $250 million (1999 USD), much of it in Somerset and Bergen counties. Seven people died in New Jersey during Floyd's passage – six due to drowning, and one in a traffic accident. A police lieutenant took his life after coordinating floodwater rescues for nearly 48 hours.

Hurricane Floyd
Tropical Storm Floyd over the New York Metro area
Meteorological history
DateSeptember 16, 1999
Tropical storm
1-minute sustained (SSHWS/NWS)
Highest winds45 mph (70 km/h)
Highest gusts55 mph (85 km/h)
Lowest pressure997 mbar (hPa); 29.44 inHg
Overall effects
Fatalities8 total
Damage$250 million (1999 USD)
Areas affectedNew Jersey

Part of the 1999 Atlantic hurricane season
Effects

Other wikis

  • Commons: Floyd images

Hurricane Floyd struck North Carolina on September 16 and moved up the East Coast of the United States, crossing over much of the Jersey Shore as a tropical storm. Ahead of the storm, the National Hurricane Center issued hurricane and tropical storm warnings for the coastline. Following the state's fourth-worst drought in a century, Floyd dropped rainfall across New Jersey, peaking at 14.13 in (359 mm) in Little Falls; this was the highest statewide rain from a tropical cyclone since 1950. The rains collected in rivers and streams, causing record flooding at 18 river gauges, and mostly affecting the Raritan, Passaic, and Delaware basins. A water treatment plant was damaged in Bridgewater Township, forcing nearly 500,000 people in Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex, and Somerset counties to boil water for eight days.

After the storm, the name Floyd was retired and removed from the Atlantic hurricane naming list. The United States government provided New Jersey with over $277 million in disaster related assistance. After floodwaters in Bound Brook reached 13 ft (4.0 m) deep, the Green Brook Flood Control Project was built to prevent future floods; the section near Bound Brook opened in 2016.

Preparations edit

Hurricane Floyd was a long-tracked Cape Verde hurricane that threatened to strike Florida for several days, until a turn toward the north occurred. As Floyd turned away from Florida, the National Hurricane Center (NHC) issued various tropical cyclone warnings and watches for the East Coast of the United States. On September 15, the NHC first issued a tropical storm watch for the entirety of New Jersey's coastline from the Delaware Bay to the New York Metro area. Early the next day, this was upgraded to a hurricane warning as far north as Manasquan Inlet, with a tropical storm warning extending northward to New York. These watches and warnings were downgraded and discontinued as Floyd weakened from a hurricane to tropical storm status. Late on September 16, the center of Floyd crossed the Delaware Bay and moved up the New Jersey coastline as a tropical storm, less than 18 hours after the hurricane made landfall in North Carolina.[1]

Ahead of the storm, then-governor Christine Todd Whitman declared a state of emergency, prompting school closures. In Vineland, about 3,700 people evacuated from trailer parks. Train service along the Northeast Corridor and NJ Transit lines were canceled for over three days. Rutgers University canceled classes for two days.[2]

Impact edit

 
Rainfall from Floyd in the United States, showing the highest statewide totals in northern New Jersey

From April to July, rainfall in New Jersey was 7.14 inches (181 mm) below normal, the second-driest for that time period since 1900.[3] In August 1999, then-governor Christine Todd Whitman declared a drought emergency amid the state's fourth-worst drought in a century.[4] Although the state received normal rainfall in the month leading up to Floyd, New Jersey was still in a drought emergency when the storm arrived. On September 15, 1999, a day before Floyd moved through the state, an approaching cold front dropped over 1 inch (25 mm) of rainfall, fueled by moisture from the storm. As Floyd moved through state, it dropped heavy rainfall over a 12-hour period in North Jersey.[3] Across New Jersey, the average rainfall total was 7.05 in (179 mm), with the highest totals in North Jersey.[5] The peak statewide precipitation during Floyd was 14.13 in (359 mm) in Little Falls,[6] which was the highest rainfall total associated with a tropical cyclone in the state since 1950.[7] More than 12 in (300 mm) of rainfall occurred in Hunterdon, western Somerset, Morris, Essex, Passaic, and Union counties, with the heaviest totals near the Watchung Mountains.[2] This was equivalent to three months' of rainfall.[8] Water capacity in North Jersey reservoirs were 11% below average ahead of the storm, but within a week of Floyd rose to 11% above average.[3] The storm's heavy rainfall caused flooding along rivers and streams, mostly in the northern half of New Jersey. Record flooding occurred at 18 river gauges, including 10 along the Raritan River basin.[8]

In addition to the storm's rainfall, Floyd produced gusty winds. The strongest observed winds in the state occurred at Newark Liberty International Airport, which recorded sustained winds of 44 mph (71 km/h), and gusts of 53 mph (85 km/h).[1] Floyd produced above normal tides along the eastern United States coastline. In Cape May, tides reached 7.36 ft (2.24 m) above mean sea level, which equates to a storm surge of 2.6 ft (0.79 m).[1]

Tropical Storm Floyd killed seven people in the state – six due to drowning, and one person in a fatal car accident on the New Jersey Turnpike. The combination of saturated grounds and gusty winds knocked over trees throughout the state, some of which fell onto houses. Flooding forced about 26,000 people to evacuate statewide, about half of which occurred in Somerset and Bergen counties. Statewide, Tropical Storm Floyd damaged 39,113 houses, 2,232 apartments, and 2,183 businesses; of these, 183 homes or apartments and 75 businesses were destroyed. Storm-related power outages affected around 616,400 homes and businesses, lasting up to five days. About 17,800 people, mostly in Somerset County, lost gas service for as long as two weeks after the storm.[2] Severe flooding from Floyd damaged 24 dams and destroyed three others: Kirby's Mill in Medford, Bostwick Lake in Upper Deerfield Township, and Spencer Detention Basin Dam in Morris Township.[9]

Statewide damage from Tropical Storm Floyd totaled $250 million,[5] making it the costliest natural disaster on record in the state.[10] Early damage estimates were as high as $1.1 billion.[2] Floyd's damage total was surpassed by Hurricane Irene in 2011, which caused around $1 billion in statewide damage. Irene was surpassed a year later by Hurricane Sandy causing $30 billion in damage.[5]

South Jersey and coast edit

Along the Jersey Shore, Floyd caused minor beach erosion and back bay flooding. More significant flooding occurred in the Delaware Valley and its tributaries in the state due to heavy rainfall. A man drowned in the Salem River near Pennsville Township. In Haddonfield, the Cooper River crested at 3.9–1.1 ft (1.19–0.34 m) above flood stage. More than 60 people had to evacuate in Burlington, Camden, and Ocean counties, including an elder care facility in Ocean County. The floods closed two bridges and ten roads in the region, including parts of U.S. Route 130, and damaged a road in Woolwich Township. Downed trees damaged a house in both Blackwood and Toms River.[2]

Central Jersey edit

 
Damage removal in Bound Brook

In Central Jersey, Floyd's heavy rainfall was a 1-in-100 year event. The rains accumulated in rivers and streams, causing record or near-record flooding at four locations along the Raritan River. In Bound Brook, the Raritan crested at a record 42.5 ft (13.0 m) on September 16, well above the 28 ft (8.5 m) flood stage, and exceeding the previous record of 37.5 ft (11.4 m) set during Tropical Storm Doria in 1971. In Manville, the Raritan crested at a record 27.5 ft (8.4 m), nearly double the flood stage of 14 ft (4.3 m). The Millstone River crested at a record 21 ft (6.4 m), more than double the flood stage of 9 ft (2.7 m).[2] Despite being built to withstand a 500-year flood, excessive floodwaters damaged a water treatment plant in Bridgewater Township.[8] Consequentially, nearly 500,000 people in Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex, and Somerset counties had to boil water for eight days. Several schools could not reopen until the water flow was restored. Other sewage treatment plants in the region were unable to withstand the rush of water, causing raw sewage to be released into rivers and streams.[2]

The worst flooding damage occurred in Somerset County, where several townships became isolated, and about 75% of the bridges were destroyed or damaged. The floods covered several roads, including New Jersey Route 18. There was also heavy tree damage in the northern half of the county. In downtown Bound Brook, floodwaters reached a depth of 13 ft (4.0 m). The record floods forced nearly 2,000 people to evacuate, including nearly 800 people from the second-story or on the roofs of their houses. Two people drowned in the city after they refused to evacuate their apartment. More than 200 homes were condemned. An electrical malfunction sparked a fire in downtown that destroyed or severely damaged seven businesses.[2] Firefighters had to use helicopters and boats to put out the blaze.[11] Parts of Manville were flooded to a depth of 10 ft (3.0 m), which damaged 1,500 homes, caused 284 homes to be condemned, and forced 1,000 people to evacuate. The flooding in Franklin Township caused $1.5 million worth of damage to the Zarapeth Community Church, where 20,000 books were destroyed. When the Green Brook exceeded its banks, the Green Brook Township Municipal Building was covered with nearly 3 ft (0.91 m) of contaminated floodwaters. In Hillsborough Township, flooding from the Millstone and the Neshanic rivers flooded 200 houses and forced 600 people to evacuate.[2]

Downstream the Raritan River, Middlesex County also sustained flooding damage, with more than 30 roads closed. In New Brunswick, about 1,000 people had to evacuate due to the rising Raritan River, which destroyed the city's police department and municipal court. The flooding damaged 500 homes in Middlesex, with a city damage total of $6 million. In Piscataway, three apartment complexes were flooded, and citywide damage was estimated at $5 million. The floods damaged more than 100 homes in Dunellen. In Monmouth County, floodwaters closed portions of state routes 35 and 36, as well as six roads in Manalapan Township. The floods washed thousands of industrial drums and barrels into the Raritan Bay and onto adjacent beaches.[2]

Upstream reaches of the Raritan River caused flooding damage in Hunterdon County, where 699 homes were damaged and five were destroyed, and two apartment complexes were severely damaged. The floods damaged 5% of the county's roads, and closed three bridges for a period of two months. In Lambertville, the swollen Swan Creek flooded about 100 homes and damaged a water pipe, leaving the city temporarily without water service. The city's elementary school sustained $1.1 million in damage after it was flooded with nearly 2 ft (0.61 m) of water; it was closed for 12 days. High winds damaged two homes in Holland Township. In Mercer County to the southeast of Hunterdon County, flooding closed about 85 roads, including portions of Interstate 95, U.S. 1 and U.S. 130, and NJ 33. Hundreds of people required rescue after their cars became trapped in the floodwaters. In Trenton, the swollen Assunpink Creek damaged 40 homes and three businesses. The Shabakunk Creek exceeded its banks, damaging nearby homes and business, including a car dealership. High winds damaged the chimney and roof of the Imani Community Church, causing $1.1 million in damage.[2]

North Jersey edit

 
Animation of Floyd's rainfall in the Mid-Atlantic States

The state's heaviest rainfall from Floyd occurred in urban areas of North Jersey. Streams and tributaries of the Passaic River reached flood stage at several locations. In Pine Brook in Morris County, the Passaic remained above flood stage for nearly five days. The Pompton River in Pompton Plains crested at 21 ft (6.4 m), or 5 ft (1.5 m) above flood stage, which was its third highest level on record.[2] Three rivers in North Jersey reached record flood levels – the Hackensack River at New Milford, the Saddle River at Lodi, and the Pascack Brook at Westwood.[12]

In North Jersey, two people drowned in their cars in Bergen County.[12] Two people also drowned in Passaic County.[2] A police lieutenant in Cranford in Union County took his life after coordinating floodwater rescues for nearly 48 hours;[8] the town's police received 750 calls related to the floods.[13] Urban flooding closed roads and entered basements. Gusty winds and saturated soil knocked down hundreds of trees across North Jersey, causing outages to utilities.[2] In Rochelle Park, the Saddle River inundated the Electronic Data Systems building, a data processing center; the outage disrupted service to about 8,000 ATMs across the United States.[14] In the same town, flooding in a Bell Atlantic switching facility cut off phone service to one million customers.[13] About 37,000 homes lost phone service for four days.[2]

In Morris County, strong winds knocked down hundreds of trees, which damaged dozens of homes. This was some of the worst wind damage in the state. About 90% of Harding Township lost power when trees fell onto power lines. Floodwaters in Morris County forced about 1,500 people to evacuate, and closed dozens of roads, including U.S. 46 and state routes NJ 10, NJ 23, and NJ 53. In Pequannock, flooding damaged around 250 houses, causing an estimated $5.5 million in damage. One house collapsed in the flooding, trapping two people and a dog inside; they were all rescued. Floodwaters washed away the Allen Street Bridge in Netcong. The swollen Whippany River forced 50 families to evacuate in Morristown.[2] Floods in Bergen County entered the Lodi municipal building, dozens of homes, an elderly care facility, and Felician University.[8] In Warren County, flooding in an evacuated trailer park in Franklin Township sparked an electrical fire, leading to an explosion of a trailer. Contaminated floodwaters disrupted public water service in Andover and Hampton Township.[2]

Aftermath edit

 
Debris removal in Bound Brook six days after Floyd's passage

Following the storm, the name "Floyd" was retired and removed from the Atlantic hurricane naming list.[15] Due to Floyd's damage in the state, then-President Bill Clinton declared a state of emergency on September 17, and a day later declared a federal disaster area for nine counties – Bergen, Essex, Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex, Morris, Passaic, Somerset, and Union. This declaration allowed for emergency funding to be used for debris removal, restoring public facilities, unemployment benefits for storm victims, and public assistance for homes and businesses.[16][17][18][19] FEMA – the Federal Emergency Management Agency – as well as other federal agencies provided over $277 million in assistance to New Jersey.[20]

FEMA opened three disaster recovery centers and three mobile units to provide information about federal assistance, which ultimately assisted 4,241 people. Applications for federal assistance ended two months after the storm struck on December 17, 1999. By that time, 20,439 state residents registered for some form assistance, including $78.7 million in loans from the Small Business Administration, over $35 million in housing or family assistance, $267,798 in unemployment assistance, and more than $150,000 for crisis counseling. The state received more than $7.5 million to repair public facilities.[21] FEMA worked with New Jersey to buy and tear down 44 flooded homes in Manville.[22]

The New Jersey legislature approved the Emergency Disaster Relief Act of 1999, which provided $60 million in emergency funds for residents affected by Floyd, as well as $20 million to assist farmers struck by the preceding drought.[4] The legislature also provided a sales tax refund for residents in flood areas purchasing new vehicles, appliances, heating and cooling units, and other household repairs.[23] After the storm, officials redrew flood maps to include homes inundated by Floyd.[24]

The receding floodwaters left behind a layer of dust on roadways, windows, and cars.[8] KeySpan sent 70 trucks to repair damaged gas lines.[13] The New Jersey National Guard delivered nearly 500,000 bottles of water to residents along the Raritan River without clean drinking water. During storm cleanup, a building inspector became ill from Legionnaire's Disease.[2] Volunteer organizations provided assistance to state residents. The American Red Cross served over 143,000 meals to more than 2,400 families. The New Jersey State Bar Association provided pro bono disaster legal service to state residents.[21]

After downtown Bound Brook was under 12 ft (3.7 m) of floodwaters, the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection worked with the New York District of the Corps of Engineers to build the Green Brook Flood Control Project. The $110 million project was designed to withstand a 150-year flood. Construction began in 2000 and was finished in 2016.[25][26] The flooding in Bound Brook affected Hispanic immigrants living in crowded homes; after the storm, there were reports of rent gouging and harassment toward Hispanic residents, including late-night housing inspections. In 2003, New Jersey Governor Jim McGreevey signed into law a bill to prevent landlords from raising rents more than twice the inflation rate within 10 mi (16 km) of a disaster area. Due to complaints, the United States Department of Justice sued Bound Brook in 2004, which resulted in a change in the borough's housing policy.[27][28][29]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Richard J. Pasch; Todd B. Kimberlain; Stacy R. Stewart (September 9, 2014). Hurricane Floyd Preliminary Report (PDF) (Report). National Hurricane Center.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r "Heavy Rain Event Report". National Climatic Data Center. from the original on July 8, 2019. Retrieved September 29, 2018.
  3. ^ a b c David A. Paterson. Hurricane Floyd Rainfall in New Jersey (PDF). 12th Conference on Applied Climatology. University of Rutgers. pp. 265–268.
  4. ^ a b "2000 Annual Report". New Jersey. Retrieved October 15, 2018.
  5. ^ a b c "Risk Assessment" (PDF). State of New Jersey 2014 Hazard Mitigation Plan (Report). State of New Jersey. Page 5.8-2. Retrieved September 23, 2018.
  6. ^ Roth, David M (May 12, 2022). "Tropical Cyclone Rainfall in the Mid-Atlantic United States". Tropical Cyclone Rainfall. United States Weather Prediction Center. Retrieved January 6, 2023.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  7. ^ "Maximum Rainfall caused by North Atlantic & Northeast Pacific Tropical Cyclones and their remnants per state (1950-2018)" (GIF). Weather Prediction Center. Retrieved October 6, 2018.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Steve Strunsky (October 17, 1999). "After the Flood; With a Billion of Dollars in Damage, New Jersey Will Be Wringing Out a Long Time". The New York Times. Retrieved October 15, 2018.
  9. ^ "Hurricane Floyd". New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection Bureau of Dam Safety. Retrieved September 29, 2018.
  10. ^ Congressional Record, V. 146, Pt. 8, June 13, 2000 to June 21, 2000. Proceedings and Debates of the 106th Congress Second Session. United States Government Printing Office. 2005. p. 10649. ISBN 9780160732515.
  11. ^ "Floyd leaves flooding, fire behind". United Press International. September 17, 1999. Retrieved October 15, 2018.
  12. ^ a b "Flash Flood Event Report". National Climatic Data Center. from the original on July 8, 2019. Retrieved October 9, 2018.
  13. ^ a b c Chen, David W. (September 21, 1999). "No Solace in the New Week as the Storm's Legacies Linger". The New York Times. Retrieved December 14, 2008.
  14. ^ Newman, Andy (September 20, 1999). "Flood Disrupts Bank Machines Across Country". The New York Times. Retrieved December 14, 2008.
  15. ^ Gary Padgett; John L. Beven; Free, James Lewis; Delgado, Sandy (April 27, 2016). "Subject: B3) What storm names have been retired?". Tropical Cyclone Frequently Asked Questions. United States Hurricane Research Division. from the original on July 1, 2015. Retrieved January 28, 2018.
  16. ^ "New Jersey Hurricane Floyd (EM-3148)". FEMA. Retrieved October 8, 2018.
  17. ^ "New Jersey Hurricane Floyd (DR-1295)". FEMA. Retrieved October 8, 2018.
  18. ^ "Disaster Aid Ordered For New Jersey Hurricane Recovery". FEMA. September 19, 1999. Retrieved October 8, 2018.
  19. ^ "Flood Victims Eligible for Unemployment Benefits Helping Hand for Those Left Jobless". FEMA. September 27, 1999. Retrieved October 8, 2018.
  20. ^ Wendy Ginsberg (April 2, 2000). "Briefing: Disaster Aid; Tallying Hurricane Assistance". The New York Times. Retrieved March 7, 2019.
  21. ^ a b "New Jersey Recovery Assistance Final Update". FEMA. December 17, 1999. Retrieved October 8, 2018.
  22. ^ Jill P. Capuzzo (March 29, 2012). "Flooding Risk Rises Statewide". The New York Times. Retrieved March 7, 2019.
  23. ^ An Act exempting from the sales and use tax certain purchases by flood victims of Hurricane Floyd of motor vehicles and equipment, supplementing P.L.1966, c.30 (C.54:32B-1 et seq.) (Public Law 2219, Chapter 262). October 25, 1999.
  24. ^ Antoinette Martin (September 8, 2011). "How Flooding Hurts Home Values". The New York Times. Retrieved March 7, 2019.
  25. ^ Green Brook Flood Control Project (Report). New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection. 2016. Retrieved March 7, 2019.
  26. ^ Dave Hutchinson (August 11, 1999). "N.J. town to celebrate completion of $100M flood project". NJ.com. Retrieved March 7, 2019.
  27. ^ Ford Fessenden (August 27, 2006). "The New Crossroads of the World". The New York Times. Retrieved March 7, 2019.
  28. ^ Joshua Brustein (August 28, 2008). "Immigration Stirs Up Bound Brook, Again". The New York Times. Retrieved March 7, 2019.
  29. ^ Karen Demasters (January 5, 2003). "Briefing: House and Home; Rent Gouging Outlawed". The New York Times. Retrieved March 7, 2019.

effects, hurricane, floyd, jersey, hurricane, floyd, 1999, costliest, natural, disaster, jersey, history, until, surpassed, hurricane, irene, 2011, damage, state, totaled, million, 1999, much, somerset, bergen, counties, seven, people, died, jersey, during, fl. Hurricane Floyd in 1999 was the costliest natural disaster in New Jersey s history until it was surpassed by Hurricane Irene in 2011 Damage in the state totaled 250 million 1999 USD much of it in Somerset and Bergen counties Seven people died in New Jersey during Floyd s passage six due to drowning and one in a traffic accident A police lieutenant took his life after coordinating floodwater rescues for nearly 48 hours Hurricane Floyd Tropical Storm Floyd over the New York Metro areaMeteorological historyDateSeptember 16 1999Tropical storm1 minute sustained SSHWS NWS Highest winds45 mph 70 km h Highest gusts55 mph 85 km h Lowest pressure997 mbar hPa 29 44 inHgOverall effectsFatalities8 totalDamage 250 million 1999 USD Areas affectedNew JerseyPart of the 1999 Atlantic hurricane seasonEffects Florida New England New Jersey New York North Carolina Pennsylvania Other wikis Commons Floyd images Hurricane Floyd struck North Carolina on September 16 and moved up the East Coast of the United States crossing over much of the Jersey Shore as a tropical storm Ahead of the storm the National Hurricane Center issued hurricane and tropical storm warnings for the coastline Following the state s fourth worst drought in a century Floyd dropped rainfall across New Jersey peaking at 14 13 in 359 mm in Little Falls this was the highest statewide rain from a tropical cyclone since 1950 The rains collected in rivers and streams causing record flooding at 18 river gauges and mostly affecting the Raritan Passaic and Delaware basins A water treatment plant was damaged in Bridgewater Township forcing nearly 500 000 people in Hunterdon Mercer Middlesex and Somerset counties to boil water for eight days After the storm the name Floyd was retired and removed from the Atlantic hurricane naming list The United States government provided New Jersey with over 277 million in disaster related assistance After floodwaters in Bound Brook reached 13 ft 4 0 m deep the Green Brook Flood Control Project was built to prevent future floods the section near Bound Brook opened in 2016 Contents 1 Preparations 2 Impact 2 1 South Jersey and coast 2 2 Central Jersey 2 3 North Jersey 3 Aftermath 4 See also 5 ReferencesPreparations editHurricane Floyd was a long tracked Cape Verde hurricane that threatened to strike Florida for several days until a turn toward the north occurred As Floyd turned away from Florida the National Hurricane Center NHC issued various tropical cyclone warnings and watches for the East Coast of the United States On September 15 the NHC first issued a tropical storm watch for the entirety of New Jersey s coastline from the Delaware Bay to the New York Metro area Early the next day this was upgraded to a hurricane warning as far north as Manasquan Inlet with a tropical storm warning extending northward to New York These watches and warnings were downgraded and discontinued as Floyd weakened from a hurricane to tropical storm status Late on September 16 the center of Floyd crossed the Delaware Bay and moved up the New Jersey coastline as a tropical storm less than 18 hours after the hurricane made landfall in North Carolina 1 Ahead of the storm then governor Christine Todd Whitman declared a state of emergency prompting school closures In Vineland about 3 700 people evacuated from trailer parks Train service along the Northeast Corridor and NJ Transit lines were canceled for over three days Rutgers University canceled classes for two days 2 Impact edit nbsp Rainfall from Floyd in the United States showing the highest statewide totals in northern New Jersey From April to July rainfall in New Jersey was 7 14 inches 181 mm below normal the second driest for that time period since 1900 3 In August 1999 then governor Christine Todd Whitman declared a drought emergency amid the state s fourth worst drought in a century 4 Although the state received normal rainfall in the month leading up to Floyd New Jersey was still in a drought emergency when the storm arrived On September 15 1999 a day before Floyd moved through the state an approaching cold front dropped over 1 inch 25 mm of rainfall fueled by moisture from the storm As Floyd moved through state it dropped heavy rainfall over a 12 hour period in North Jersey 3 Across New Jersey the average rainfall total was 7 05 in 179 mm with the highest totals in North Jersey 5 The peak statewide precipitation during Floyd was 14 13 in 359 mm in Little Falls 6 which was the highest rainfall total associated with a tropical cyclone in the state since 1950 7 More than 12 in 300 mm of rainfall occurred in Hunterdon western Somerset Morris Essex Passaic and Union counties with the heaviest totals near the Watchung Mountains 2 This was equivalent to three months of rainfall 8 Water capacity in North Jersey reservoirs were 11 below average ahead of the storm but within a week of Floyd rose to 11 above average 3 The storm s heavy rainfall caused flooding along rivers and streams mostly in the northern half of New Jersey Record flooding occurred at 18 river gauges including 10 along the Raritan River basin 8 In addition to the storm s rainfall Floyd produced gusty winds The strongest observed winds in the state occurred at Newark Liberty International Airport which recorded sustained winds of 44 mph 71 km h and gusts of 53 mph 85 km h 1 Floyd produced above normal tides along the eastern United States coastline In Cape May tides reached 7 36 ft 2 24 m above mean sea level which equates to a storm surge of 2 6 ft 0 79 m 1 Tropical Storm Floyd killed seven people in the state six due to drowning and one person in a fatal car accident on the New Jersey Turnpike The combination of saturated grounds and gusty winds knocked over trees throughout the state some of which fell onto houses Flooding forced about 26 000 people to evacuate statewide about half of which occurred in Somerset and Bergen counties Statewide Tropical Storm Floyd damaged 39 113 houses 2 232 apartments and 2 183 businesses of these 183 homes or apartments and 75 businesses were destroyed Storm related power outages affected around 616 400 homes and businesses lasting up to five days About 17 800 people mostly in Somerset County lost gas service for as long as two weeks after the storm 2 Severe flooding from Floyd damaged 24 dams and destroyed three others Kirby s Mill in Medford Bostwick Lake in Upper Deerfield Township and Spencer Detention Basin Dam in Morris Township 9 Statewide damage from Tropical Storm Floyd totaled 250 million 5 making it the costliest natural disaster on record in the state 10 Early damage estimates were as high as 1 1 billion 2 Floyd s damage total was surpassed by Hurricane Irene in 2011 which caused around 1 billion in statewide damage Irene was surpassed a year later by Hurricane Sandy causing 30 billion in damage 5 South Jersey and coast edit Along the Jersey Shore Floyd caused minor beach erosion and back bay flooding More significant flooding occurred in the Delaware Valley and its tributaries in the state due to heavy rainfall A man drowned in the Salem River near Pennsville Township In Haddonfield the Cooper River crested at 3 9 1 1 ft 1 19 0 34 m above flood stage More than 60 people had to evacuate in Burlington Camden and Ocean counties including an elder care facility in Ocean County The floods closed two bridges and ten roads in the region including parts of U S Route 130 and damaged a road in Woolwich Township Downed trees damaged a house in both Blackwood and Toms River 2 Central Jersey edit nbsp Damage removal in Bound Brook In Central Jersey Floyd s heavy rainfall was a 1 in 100 year event The rains accumulated in rivers and streams causing record or near record flooding at four locations along the Raritan River In Bound Brook the Raritan crested at a record 42 5 ft 13 0 m on September 16 well above the 28 ft 8 5 m flood stage and exceeding the previous record of 37 5 ft 11 4 m set during Tropical Storm Doria in 1971 In Manville the Raritan crested at a record 27 5 ft 8 4 m nearly double the flood stage of 14 ft 4 3 m The Millstone River crested at a record 21 ft 6 4 m more than double the flood stage of 9 ft 2 7 m 2 Despite being built to withstand a 500 year flood excessive floodwaters damaged a water treatment plant in Bridgewater Township 8 Consequentially nearly 500 000 people in Hunterdon Mercer Middlesex and Somerset counties had to boil water for eight days Several schools could not reopen until the water flow was restored Other sewage treatment plants in the region were unable to withstand the rush of water causing raw sewage to be released into rivers and streams 2 The worst flooding damage occurred in Somerset County where several townships became isolated and about 75 of the bridges were destroyed or damaged The floods covered several roads including New Jersey Route 18 There was also heavy tree damage in the northern half of the county In downtown Bound Brook floodwaters reached a depth of 13 ft 4 0 m The record floods forced nearly 2 000 people to evacuate including nearly 800 people from the second story or on the roofs of their houses Two people drowned in the city after they refused to evacuate their apartment More than 200 homes were condemned An electrical malfunction sparked a fire in downtown that destroyed or severely damaged seven businesses 2 Firefighters had to use helicopters and boats to put out the blaze 11 Parts of Manville were flooded to a depth of 10 ft 3 0 m which damaged 1 500 homes caused 284 homes to be condemned and forced 1 000 people to evacuate The flooding in Franklin Township caused 1 5 million worth of damage to the Zarapeth Community Church where 20 000 books were destroyed When the Green Brook exceeded its banks the Green Brook Township Municipal Building was covered with nearly 3 ft 0 91 m of contaminated floodwaters In Hillsborough Township flooding from the Millstone and the Neshanic rivers flooded 200 houses and forced 600 people to evacuate 2 Downstream the Raritan River Middlesex County also sustained flooding damage with more than 30 roads closed In New Brunswick about 1 000 people had to evacuate due to the rising Raritan River which destroyed the city s police department and municipal court The flooding damaged 500 homes in Middlesex with a city damage total of 6 million In Piscataway three apartment complexes were flooded and citywide damage was estimated at 5 million The floods damaged more than 100 homes in Dunellen In Monmouth County floodwaters closed portions of state routes 35 and 36 as well as six roads in Manalapan Township The floods washed thousands of industrial drums and barrels into the Raritan Bay and onto adjacent beaches 2 Upstream reaches of the Raritan River caused flooding damage in Hunterdon County where 699 homes were damaged and five were destroyed and two apartment complexes were severely damaged The floods damaged 5 of the county s roads and closed three bridges for a period of two months In Lambertville the swollen Swan Creek flooded about 100 homes and damaged a water pipe leaving the city temporarily without water service The city s elementary school sustained 1 1 million in damage after it was flooded with nearly 2 ft 0 61 m of water it was closed for 12 days High winds damaged two homes in Holland Township In Mercer County to the southeast of Hunterdon County flooding closed about 85 roads including portions of Interstate 95 U S 1 and U S 130 and NJ 33 Hundreds of people required rescue after their cars became trapped in the floodwaters In Trenton the swollen Assunpink Creek damaged 40 homes and three businesses The Shabakunk Creek exceeded its banks damaging nearby homes and business including a car dealership High winds damaged the chimney and roof of the Imani Community Church causing 1 1 million in damage 2 North Jersey edit nbsp Animation of Floyd s rainfall in the Mid Atlantic States The state s heaviest rainfall from Floyd occurred in urban areas of North Jersey Streams and tributaries of the Passaic River reached flood stage at several locations In Pine Brook in Morris County the Passaic remained above flood stage for nearly five days The Pompton River in Pompton Plains crested at 21 ft 6 4 m or 5 ft 1 5 m above flood stage which was its third highest level on record 2 Three rivers in North Jersey reached record flood levels the Hackensack River at New Milford the Saddle River at Lodi and the Pascack Brook at Westwood 12 In North Jersey two people drowned in their cars in Bergen County 12 Two people also drowned in Passaic County 2 A police lieutenant in Cranford in Union County took his life after coordinating floodwater rescues for nearly 48 hours 8 the town s police received 750 calls related to the floods 13 Urban flooding closed roads and entered basements Gusty winds and saturated soil knocked down hundreds of trees across North Jersey causing outages to utilities 2 In Rochelle Park the Saddle River inundated the Electronic Data Systems building a data processing center the outage disrupted service to about 8 000 ATMs across the United States 14 In the same town flooding in a Bell Atlantic switching facility cut off phone service to one million customers 13 About 37 000 homes lost phone service for four days 2 In Morris County strong winds knocked down hundreds of trees which damaged dozens of homes This was some of the worst wind damage in the state About 90 of Harding Township lost power when trees fell onto power lines Floodwaters in Morris County forced about 1 500 people to evacuate and closed dozens of roads including U S 46 and state routes NJ 10 NJ 23 and NJ 53 In Pequannock flooding damaged around 250 houses causing an estimated 5 5 million in damage One house collapsed in the flooding trapping two people and a dog inside they were all rescued Floodwaters washed away the Allen Street Bridge in Netcong The swollen Whippany River forced 50 families to evacuate in Morristown 2 Floods in Bergen County entered the Lodi municipal building dozens of homes an elderly care facility and Felician University 8 In Warren County flooding in an evacuated trailer park in Franklin Township sparked an electrical fire leading to an explosion of a trailer Contaminated floodwaters disrupted public water service in Andover and Hampton Township 2 Aftermath edit nbsp Debris removal in Bound Brook six days after Floyd s passage Following the storm the name Floyd was retired and removed from the Atlantic hurricane naming list 15 Due to Floyd s damage in the state then President Bill Clinton declared a state of emergency on September 17 and a day later declared a federal disaster area for nine counties Bergen Essex Hunterdon Mercer Middlesex Morris Passaic Somerset and Union This declaration allowed for emergency funding to be used for debris removal restoring public facilities unemployment benefits for storm victims and public assistance for homes and businesses 16 17 18 19 FEMA the Federal Emergency Management Agency as well as other federal agencies provided over 277 million in assistance to New Jersey 20 FEMA opened three disaster recovery centers and three mobile units to provide information about federal assistance which ultimately assisted 4 241 people Applications for federal assistance ended two months after the storm struck on December 17 1999 By that time 20 439 state residents registered for some form assistance including 78 7 million in loans from the Small Business Administration over 35 million in housing or family assistance 267 798 in unemployment assistance and more than 150 000 for crisis counseling The state received more than 7 5 million to repair public facilities 21 FEMA worked with New Jersey to buy and tear down 44 flooded homes in Manville 22 The New Jersey legislature approved the Emergency Disaster Relief Act of 1999 which provided 60 million in emergency funds for residents affected by Floyd as well as 20 million to assist farmers struck by the preceding drought 4 The legislature also provided a sales tax refund for residents in flood areas purchasing new vehicles appliances heating and cooling units and other household repairs 23 After the storm officials redrew flood maps to include homes inundated by Floyd 24 The receding floodwaters left behind a layer of dust on roadways windows and cars 8 KeySpan sent 70 trucks to repair damaged gas lines 13 The New Jersey National Guard delivered nearly 500 000 bottles of water to residents along the Raritan River without clean drinking water During storm cleanup a building inspector became ill from Legionnaire s Disease 2 Volunteer organizations provided assistance to state residents The American Red Cross served over 143 000 meals to more than 2 400 families The New Jersey State Bar Association provided pro bono disaster legal service to state residents 21 After downtown Bound Brook was under 12 ft 3 7 m of floodwaters the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection worked with the New York District of the Corps of Engineers to build the Green Brook Flood Control Project The 110 million project was designed to withstand a 150 year flood Construction began in 2000 and was finished in 2016 25 26 The flooding in Bound Brook affected Hispanic immigrants living in crowded homes after the storm there were reports of rent gouging and harassment toward Hispanic residents including late night housing inspections In 2003 New Jersey Governor Jim McGreevey signed into law a bill to prevent landlords from raising rents more than twice the inflation rate within 10 mi 16 km of a disaster area Due to complaints the United States Department of Justice sued Bound Brook in 2004 which resulted in a change in the borough s housing policy 27 28 29 See also edit nbsp Tropical cyclones portal List of New Jersey hurricanes List of retired Atlantic hurricane namesReferences edit a b c Richard J Pasch Todd B Kimberlain Stacy R Stewart September 9 2014 Hurricane Floyd Preliminary Report PDF Report National Hurricane Center a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Heavy Rain Event Report National Climatic Data Center Archived from the original on July 8 2019 Retrieved September 29 2018 a b c David A Paterson Hurricane Floyd Rainfall in New Jersey PDF 12th Conference on Applied Climatology University of Rutgers pp 265 268 a b 2000 Annual Report New Jersey Retrieved October 15 2018 a b c Risk Assessment PDF State of New Jersey 2014 Hazard Mitigation Plan Report State of New Jersey Page 5 8 2 Retrieved September 23 2018 Roth David M May 12 2022 Tropical Cyclone Rainfall in the Mid Atlantic United States Tropical Cyclone Rainfall United States Weather Prediction Center Retrieved January 6 2023 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Maximum Rainfall caused by North Atlantic amp Northeast Pacific Tropical Cyclones and their remnants per state 1950 2018 GIF Weather Prediction Center Retrieved October 6 2018 a b c d e f Steve Strunsky October 17 1999 After the Flood With a Billion of Dollars in Damage New Jersey Will Be Wringing Out a Long Time The New York Times Retrieved October 15 2018 Hurricane Floyd New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection Bureau of Dam Safety Retrieved September 29 2018 Congressional Record V 146 Pt 8 June 13 2000 to June 21 2000 Proceedings and Debates of the 106th Congress Second Session United States Government Printing Office 2005 p 10649 ISBN 9780160732515 Floyd leaves flooding fire behind United Press International September 17 1999 Retrieved October 15 2018 a b Flash Flood Event Report National Climatic Data Center Archived from the original on July 8 2019 Retrieved October 9 2018 a b c Chen David W September 21 1999 No Solace in the New Week as the Storm s Legacies Linger The New York Times Retrieved December 14 2008 Newman Andy September 20 1999 Flood Disrupts Bank Machines Across Country The New York Times Retrieved December 14 2008 Gary Padgett John L Beven Free James Lewis Delgado Sandy April 27 2016 Subject B3 What storm names have been retired Tropical Cyclone Frequently Asked Questions United States Hurricane Research Division Archived from the original on July 1 2015 Retrieved January 28 2018 New Jersey Hurricane Floyd EM 3148 FEMA Retrieved October 8 2018 New Jersey Hurricane Floyd DR 1295 FEMA Retrieved October 8 2018 Disaster Aid Ordered For New Jersey Hurricane Recovery FEMA September 19 1999 Retrieved October 8 2018 Flood Victims Eligible for Unemployment Benefits Helping Hand for Those Left Jobless FEMA September 27 1999 Retrieved October 8 2018 Wendy Ginsberg April 2 2000 Briefing Disaster Aid Tallying Hurricane Assistance The New York Times Retrieved March 7 2019 a b New Jersey Recovery Assistance Final Update FEMA December 17 1999 Retrieved October 8 2018 Jill P Capuzzo March 29 2012 Flooding Risk Rises Statewide The New York Times Retrieved March 7 2019 An Act exempting from the sales and use tax certain purchases by flood victims of Hurricane Floyd of motor vehicles and equipment supplementing P L 1966 c 30 C 54 32B 1 et seq Public Law 2219 Chapter 262 October 25 1999 Antoinette Martin September 8 2011 How Flooding Hurts Home Values The New York Times Retrieved March 7 2019 Green Brook Flood Control Project Report New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection 2016 Retrieved March 7 2019 Dave Hutchinson August 11 1999 N J town to celebrate completion of 100M flood project NJ com Retrieved March 7 2019 Ford Fessenden August 27 2006 The New Crossroads of the World The New York Times Retrieved March 7 2019 Joshua Brustein August 28 2008 Immigration Stirs Up Bound Brook Again The New York Times Retrieved March 7 2019 Karen Demasters January 5 2003 Briefing House and Home Rent Gouging Outlawed The New York Times Retrieved March 7 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Effects of Hurricane Floyd in New Jersey amp oldid 1176162859, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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