https://wallstreetonparade.com/2024/10/report-flash-flooding-is-the-number-one-storm-related-killer-in-the-u-s-few-cities-or-towns-in-america-are-built-to-survive-its-wrath/


By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: October 3, 2024 ~

Flooding from Hurricane Helene in Ashville, NC, Friday, September 28, 2024
Flooding from Hurricane Helene in Asheville, NC, Friday, September 28, 2024

As desperate and traumatized residents of Western North Carolina have
learned over the past week, everything Americans thought they knew about
storm threats must now be reexamined. Some Western North Carolina counties
located 485 miles north of where Hurricane Helene made landfall as a
Category 4 hurricane on September 26 in Florida’s Big Bend area have
reported more deaths than the entire state of Florida.

At yesterday’s press briefing in Buncombe County, North Carolina, Sheriff
Quentin Miller reported that the death toll for his county from Hurricane
Helene had reached 61; that’s four times the 14 Hurricane Helene-related
deaths that the state of Florida is reporting.

As of this morning, total deaths reported in all states impacted by
Hurricane Helene is 190, making it the deadliest hurricane to hit the U.S.
mainland since Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

After wiping out communities on Florida’s northern coastline from Gulf of
Mexico storm surge and 140 mph winds, Hurricane Helene delivered deadly
blows inland from flash flooding as it moved north through Georgia, South
Carolina, North Carolina and Tennessee.

According to the National Weather Service (NWS), “Flash flooding is the
number one storm-related killer in the United States.” The NWS defines
flash flooding as follows:

“A flash flood is a rapid rise of water along a stream or in a low-lying
urban area. Flash flooding can result from slow-moving thunderstorms, from
numerous thunderstorms which develop repeatedly over the same area, or from
heavy rains associated with tropical cyclones. These floods may develop
within minutes, depending on the intensity of the rainfall, the topography,
soil conditions, and ground cover.”

The high death toll in Buncombe County comes from two major rivers, the
French Broad River and the Swannanoa River, overflowing their banks with
raging torrents of water sweeping away homes, businesses, and cars. Much of
the county has been developed like a dangerous bowl, with rainfall from the
surrounding Blue Ridge mountains flowing downhill into heavily populated
areas, like the city of Asheville, where FEMA and the National Guard
continue to truck and airlift food and water to residents cut off from
running water, electricity and cell phone service — seven days after the
flash flooding hit.

Thousands of towns and cities across the U.S. are at serious risk of flash
flooding as their storm drains were never constructed to handle the
unprecedented amounts of rainfall now occurring per hour during major storm
events.

The North Carolina State Climate Office posted a chart showing
record-setting 3-day rainfall totals at 12 Weather Stations in Western
North Carolina. According to the Busick, North Carolina Weather Station, as
of 8:00 a.m. on Tuesday, Busick had recorded 79.02 inches of rain
year-to-date – but an unprecedented 31.33 inches of that rain came in the
three-day period of September 25-27, during the approach of and landfall of
Hurricane Helene.

Researchers at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory have released
preliminary findings that “Climate change may have caused as much as 50%
more rainfall during Hurricane Helene in some parts of Georgia and the
Carolinas.”

In September 2023, radar in the town of Leominster, Massachusetts recorded
7.9 inches of rain falling in an hour, creating dangerous flash floods,
flooded homes and businesses, and sink holes that stunned area residents.

For the stealthy role that one fossil fuels juggernaut, Koch Industries,
has played in climate change, see our report: A Fossil Fuels Giant Has Been
Raising the Election Chances of Extreme-Right Candidates — Using a
Dangerous High-Tech Weapon.

Tens of millions of Americans are living under the illusion that their city
and town faces no catastrophic threat from flooding. A large part of that
illusion stems from local politicians refusing to accurately report deaths
from drowning during major storm events.

On November 1, 2012 Wall Street On Parade reported the following about
deaths in New York City from Hurricane Sandy:

“Despite what the paper of record would have you believe, Hurricane Sandy
was not about killer trees. Hurricane Sandy, like Hurricane Katrina, was
about killer water.

“The New York Times put it this way on Tuesday, before the death toll had
climbed even higher: ‘There were 22 deaths reported in New York City, where
the toll was heaviest, and 5 more fatalities elsewhere in the state. Most
of all, it was the trees. Uprooted or cracked by the furious winds, they
became weapons that flattened cars, houses and pedestrians.’

“Here’s the way those last two sentences should have read: ‘Most of all, it
was the wall of water. Giant storm surges rushing over the sea walls,
turning roads into instant rivers replete with white caps that pulled two
toddlers from their mother’s arms and sent many more to a watery grave in
their basements.’

“As of this morning, only 3 people in New York City are reported to have
died as a result of falling trees, or 10 percent of the now reported 34
deaths in New York City. A staggering 64 percent of the storm-related
deaths in New York City resulted directly from drowning or as a result of
an unprecedented wall of water hitting the individual directly or while
they were inside their homes.”

An archived article of the New York Times reporting that “Most of all, it
was the trees,” can be read here.

The New York Times, apparently, did not want to contradict the then
powerful billionaire Mayor of New York City, Michael Bloomberg, who
appeared unable to bring himself to mention the word “drowning” at the many
press conferences he held during and after Hurricane Sandy.

On November 2, 2012, under the headline Mayor Bloomberg — Wake Up to the
Suffering Around You, Wall Street On Parade reported the following:

“For three days, Mayor Michael Bloomberg has held multiple press
conferences characterizing deaths from Hurricane Sandy as stepping on a
downed power wire or being crushed by a fallen tree. All the while, as we
reported three days ago, the facts proved unequivocally that the vast
majority of deaths resulted from drowning.”

On October 31, 2012 Wall Street On Parade reported specific facts on the
basement drownings during Hurricane Sandy, writing:

“Three people, aged 50, 57 and 72, drowned in separate basements in the
Rockaways. The 57-year old was Henry Sullivan, according to the Associated
Press. A man in his 50s was also found dead in a flooded lower Manhattan
basement. In Tribeca, a middle-aged parking garage worker was killed when
he got trapped in the basement by flash flooding. Police found a
70-year-old woman floating in water inside a home on 98th St. in Queens
about 1 a.m. Tuesday morning…

“Artur Kasprzak, an off-duty NYPD officer in his late 20s, was found
drowned in the basement of his Staten Island home, after he had moved other
family members to safety on higher ground in the house.”

When Hurricane Ida arrived in the New York City area in 2021, the New York
Times decided to report those basement drownings, blaming them on illegal
apartments rather than the lack of government climate-change planning over
the nine-year span since Hurricane Sandy.

At 9:28 p.m. on Wednesday, September 1, 2021 the National Weather Service,
for the first time ever, issued a “Flash Flood Emergency” for New York
City, and, specifically, for two of its boroughs, Brooklyn and Queens.

To underscore just how urgent and dangerous the situation was, the National
Weather Service Tweeted 15 minutes later at 9:43 p.m. the following:

“To be clear… this particular warning for NYC is the second time we’ve ever
issued a Flash Flood Emergency (It’s the first one for NYC). The first time
we’ve issued a Flash Flood Emergency was for Northeast New Jersey an hour
ago.”

Unfortunately, people accustomed to receiving flash flood “warnings” did
not appreciate the difference between that and a flash flood “emergency.”
The difference cost many lives.

Of New York City’s five boroughs, two are islands, surrounded by water:
Manhattan and Staten Island. Two other boroughs, Brooklyn and Queens, are
geographically part of Long Island, which is also surrounded by water: on
the north by Long Island Sound, on the east and south by the Atlantic
Ocean, and on the west by New York Bay and the East River. Only the borough
of the Bronx is connected to the U.S. mainland.

Despite indisputable evidence of sea level rise and growing catastrophic
threats from unprecedented levels of rainfall, New York City’s five
boroughs are home to 8.4 million people.

The city of Asheville, North Carolina in Buncombe County – which may
require months of work by state and local governments, FEMA, the National
Guard and the Army Corps of Engineers to get back on its feet – has a
population of 93,776, according to the most recent census data of July 1,
2022.

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