Millions without power, 12 people killed and widespread flooding reported in huge population centres in Sandy's path.
Millions of people in the eastern United States have been affected by
the giant storm Sandy that has caused flooded homes, fallen trees,
widespread power outages and swamped New York City's subway system.
At least 15 people were reported killed in the US by Sandy, one of
the biggest storms to ever hit the country, which dropped just below
hurricane status before making landfall on Monday night in New Jersey.
The storm had already killed more than 60 people in the Caribbean.
More than 1 million people in a dozen states were under orders to evacuate as the massive system plowed westward.
One disaster forecasting company predicted economic losses could ultimately reach $20 billion, only half insured.
US President Barack Obama on Tuesday declared that Sandy had
triggered "major disaster" in the states of New York and New Jersey and
freed up federal aid for those who lost homes or businesses.
Heavy snows threatened mountainous regions inland, and huge
population centres of Baltimore, Philadelphia and Washington DC lay in
the storm's path.
Streets of New York City filled with floodwater, raising fears that
the city's subway tunnels could be inundated, and flying debris blew
along deserted sidewalks.
The city closed down subway, bus and commuter train systems as of Sunday night.
Trees were downed across the region, falling debris closed a major
bridge in Boston and floodwater and gusts of wind buffeted coastal towns
such as Fairfield, Connecticut, home to many commuters into New York
City, where police cruisers blocked access to the beaches.
Power and back-up generators failed at New York University hospital, and patients were being elsewhere for care.
Hurricane-force winds
The storm's wind field stretched from the Canadian border to South
Carolina, and from West Virginia to an Atlantic Ocean point about
halfway between the US and Bermuda, easily one of the largest ever seen.
The National Hurricane Center said Sandy came ashore as a
"post-tropical cyclone", meaning it still packed hurricane-force winds
but lost the characteristics of a tropical storm. It had sustained winds
of 129km per hour (kph), well above the threshold for hurricane
intensity.
US stock markets were closed on Monday, the first time since the attacks on September 11, 2001, and will remain shut on Tuesday.
The federal government in Washington was also closed, and so too were schools up and down the East Coast.
New York's electric utility, Con Edison, said it expected
"record-size outages". The company said it would preemptively shut down
transformers in some areas to prevent further damage.
Early on Tuesday morning, US power company Excelon Corp declared an
alert at the 615MW Oyster Creek nuclear power reactor in New Jersey due
to rising ocean water from Sandy, a spokesman at the US Nuclear
Regulatory Commission said.
An alert is the second lowest of the NRC's four emergency classifications.
The NRC spokesman said if the flood waters continued to rise, it
could affect the reactor's service water pumps, which are used for
shut-down cooling and to cool the spent-fuel pool.
Broken levees
A levee broke in northern New Jersey early on Tuesday morning,
flooding the towns of Moonachie, Little Ferry and Carlstadt with 1.2 to
1.5 metres of water in the wake of Hurricane Sandy, officials told
Reuters.
"We are in rescue mode," said Jeanne Baratta, chief of the Bergen
County Executive. There were no reports of fatalities as of yet, she
said.
Baratta said the three towns had been "devastated" by the flood of water caused by Sandy.
The storm interupted the US presidential campaign with eight days to go before the November 6 election.
President Obama cancelled campaign event spending Monday at the White
House overseeing the response to the disaster, while his Republican
rival Mitt Romney also canceled some campaign appearances in response to
the storm.
"This is going to be a big and powerful storm and all across the
eastern seaboard I think everybody is taking the
appropriate preparations," Obama told reporters after having a briefing
on the storm in the White House Situation Room.
Thousands of flights were cancelled, both domestic international, and
public transportation in the New York and Washington areas was
suspended.
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