4 Killed Amid Widespread Destruction Caused by Floods, Tornadoes of Ida (2024)

What to Know

  • Severe flooding is continuing throughout the region on Thursday after remnants of Hurricane Ida led to multiple tornadoes, catastrophic damage, water rescues and power outages in the Philadelphia area.
  • At least seven tornadoes were confirmed by the National Weather Service and one of them, a high-end EF-3, destroyed homes in Mullica Hill, New Jersey.
  • At least four people have been reported dead.

Editor's Note: This story is no longer being updated. For the latest on Ida's impacts on the Philadelphia region, click here.

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At least four people died in the greater Philadelphia area as a result of severe storms that pummeled the region, bringing widespread flooding, hundreds of water rescues and at least seven tornadoes.

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In Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, officials said two people drowned in floodwaters and a woman was killed by a falling tree in Upper Dublin, where the National Weather Service confirmed a tornado with peak wind speeds of up to 130 mph touched down.

Officials in the county said that nearly 500 water rescues had been carried out since Wednesday, more than three times as many as any previous single storm's total. The last record was set just 13 months ago when Tropical Storm Isaias struck and 135 water rescues took place.

Those who escaped death were left reeling by flooded homes and roadways, as well as homes, trees and power lines toppled by powerful winds.

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Record Flooding

Wednesday’s rain moved out overnight, then flooding took center stage Thursday morning as water swelled creeks and rivers long after Ida moved out. Up to 6 to 8 inches of rain fell from Chester County through Mercer County.

The storms led to deadly flooding throughout the area, including Philadelphia, where the Vine Street Expressway, MLK Drive and Kelly Drive were closed as water took over the roadways.

NBC10's Randy Gyllenhaal gives you a look at the flooded cars, apartments, homes and businesses along Main Street in Philadelphia as Manayunk was taken over by the Schuylkill River Thursday morning.

Water from the Schuylkill River flowed onto the Vine Street Expressway, turning it into a river of water that cut Center City in half from 22nd Street to Broad Street.

By 6 a.m. the water level along the Schuylkill near 30th Street Station was already at 15.25 feet, well above the major flood level of 14 feet.

Cars continued to drive along the Schuylkill Expressway during the Thursday morning commute as water began to flood I-76 near 30th Street. PennDOT eventually shut down I-76 around 6:40 a.m. It remained closed all the way to the Conshohocken Curve in Montgomery County.

I-76 later reopened in both directions between I-676 and South Street Thursday evening.

People along low-lying areas up the river in Manayunk were urged to shelter in place as the water rose. Debris could be seen floating down streets in Manayunk.

DAYLIGHT IN MANAYUNK - Do not attempt to drive through any flooded roads! If your home is flooding, shelter in place. Crest won’t happen until at least 9am @NBCPhiladelphia #manayunk #philly #phillywx pic.twitter.com/DnrxkdT6WJ

— Randy Gyllenhaal (@RandyGyllenhaal) September 2, 2021

In Center City, people were forced to evacuate the 941-unit Park Towne Place apartment complex when water from the nearby Schuylkill River overflowed. In an alert to residents, management told residents that “deteriorating conditions” forced power shutoffs.

Residents were urged not to attempt to use the elevators.

The School District of Philadelphia announced that students, who had just begun the new school year in person for the first time in more than a year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, would revert to full online learning Friday because of the damage to roads and buildings.

City offices and courts in Philadelphia will also be closed to the public on Friday.

The Schuylkill River Trail was entirely underwater – SkyForce10 witnessed a pedestrian being rescued from the trail. The Fairmount Water Works near the Philadelphia Museum of Art was underwater at daybreak, with no sign of the normal dam you see at that point.

The forecast crest for the Schuylkill River broke an all-time record in Norristown, Montgomery County, where the water was above 25 feet. The previous record was in 1869, meaning it was the worst flooding in more than 150 years.

Schuylkill River @ Norristown has set a NEW RECORD stage beating the old record set by Agnes in '72. This is DANGEROUS situation for anyone nearby the Schuylkill as the water will continue to rise until around 8a. We're on @NBCPhiladelphia now with live updates @RandyGyllenhaal pic.twitter.com/WhyiaOjhLX

— Krystal Klei (@KrystalKlei) September 2, 2021

The Schuylkill in Philadelphia crested near the all-time record of 17 feet around 9 a.m. It has since fallen a few feet.

Major flooding also occurred Thursday morning at Brandywine Creek at Downingtown and Chadds Ford, and the Perkiomen Creek at Graterford.

Crews in boats saved people off the roof of a flooded home in Bridgeport, Pennsylvania, Thursday morning as the Schuylkill River flooded over its banks. Other rescues could be seen as crews went from home to home.

The East Branch Brandywine Creek below Downingtown, Chester County, easily surpassed its old record crest of 14.8 feet that was set during Hurricane Floyd in 1999.

A temporary shelter was also created at Central Presbyterian Church on 100 West Uwchlan Avenue in Downingtown.

Both directions on the Pennsylvania Turnpike between the Valley Forge exit and Downingtown exit are closed for an extended period of time due to the significant flooding.

OK, this is incredible. East Branch Brandywine Creek below Downingtown, PA is now more than four feet above the previous all-time record crest. The creek continues to rise. pic.twitter.com/d5vQa7aizC

— Gary Szatkowski (@GarySzatkowski) September 2, 2021

Flash flooding also occurred throughout the region on Wednesday with hundreds of water rescues reported in parts of Bucks, Montgomery, Chester and Lehigh counties.

In Upper Dublin Township, Alan Fox, a resident since the '70s, said he had never seen damage of the scale he witnesses Wednesday night, with trees snapped in half, dangling power lines, cars buried by debris and pieces of the roof of Upper Dublin High School strewn on the street. The NWS later confirmed a tornado touched down in the township.

“This is the most demolished I’ve ever seen anything," Fox said as he continued walking to his house and hoping for the best.

Officials in the township told NBC10 a woman died Wednesday night when a tree fell on her house. She was one of three people killed in Montgomery County by Ida's winds and floods. Two others died in separate drownings.

Severe storms slammed the Pennsylvania suburbs on Wednesday, causing widespread damage and flooding. NBC10's Aaron Baskerville has the details.

A fourth person died in Milford Township, Bucks County.

State Troopers responded to 1925 Trumbauersville Road at 11:16 p.m. Wednesday for a report of a missing person who had driven a vehicle into the flood waters of Unami Creek.

When they arrived, state troopers and firefighters tried to retrieve the vehicle, a 2013 Mazda CX-9, but conditions were too severe. They then postponed the search efforts at 11:30 p.m. The passenger, a 54-year-old woman, managed to escape the vehicle and was taken to Saint Luke’s Upper Bucks campus.

On Thursday around 6 a.m., state troopers, firefighters and members of a water rescue team returned to the scene and found the body of the driver, later identified as 65-year-old Donald Allen Bauer of Perkiomenville, Pennsylvania. Bauer was pronounced dead at the scene. The cause of death was drowning, and his death was ruled accidental.

In Mercer County, three police officers were swept away by floodwaters but later rescued, according to the NJ State PBA.

Tornado Damage

The NWS confirmed at least seven tornadoes touched down in the region.

The weather service said a high-end EF-3 tornado in Mullica Hill, New Jersey, carried debris about 23,000 feet into the atmosphere and landed miles away. Winds from the tornado peaked at 150 mph. Some of the debris landed as far Mercer County, New Jersey, and Bucks County, Pennsylvania, a distance of about 60 miles from Mullica Hill for each location.

Homes were toppled by one of the passing tornadoes. Some of the houses still standing had their roofs ripped off and windows blown out.

Troy Bonnenberg said he was getting alerts on his phone and on the radio and was trying to keep his children calm when he suddenly heard the roof start to collapse. The family, like others in the neighborhood, rushed to their basem*nt. Bonnenberg said the basem*nt saved their lives.

Glen Pickell said he heard the tornado warning on the news but did not think it would materialize, telling his worried son "we don't get tornadoes."

A series of tornadoes spawned across the Philadelphia region on Wednesday as the remnants of Hurricane Ida dragged northeast. Homes were left destroyed and streets inundated with flood waters.

“We didn’t think anything was going to happen then all of a sudden you hear the rumbling," Pickell said. "You look outside and it’s like everybody get your butts in the basem*nt. It didn’t last that long. Maybe five minutes. But once it was over, it's crazy. You could see the damage it did.”

Emergency crews said everyone in the neighborhood was accounted for and somehow uninjured.

Another tornado touched down in Fort Washington/Upper Dublin Township and traveled to Horsham Township in Pennsylvania, the NWS reported. The EF-2 tornado had peak winds around 130 mph.

In Buckingham Township, the NWS reported an EF-1 twister with winds up to 100 mph.

The NWS said a fourth tornado, an EF-1 with 95 mph winds, touched down in Oxford and a fifth, an EF-1 with 90 mph winds, traveled from Edgewater Park, New Jersey, to Bristol, Pennsylvania.

A sixth tornado was confirmed in Princeton, New Jersey. The weather service said the EF-0 twister had estimated peak winds up to 75 mph.

Finally, a seventh tornado, an EF-1 with 90 mph winds, was confirmed in Upper Makefield Township.

A tornado destroyed several homes in Mullica Hill, New Jersey, on Wednesday. Fortunately no one was killed. NBC10's Cydney Long spoke with homeowners who are picking up the pieces.

Prior to the confirmed tornadoes, the region was in the 10% tornado risk area, which is significantly high.

According to the NWS, the last two 10% tornado threats in our region occurred on Sept. 3, 2020, and Aug. 4, 2020, during Isaias in which there were five confirmed tornadoes.

The National Weather Service Mount Holly issued 16 tornado warnings for the area on Wednesday, bringing the total number to 51 and easily breaking the previous record of 36 that was set last year.

Power Outages

There were also widespread power outages.

By early Thursday evening, PECO reported 24,484 outages in Montgomery County, 2,415 in Bucks County, 2,232 in Chester County and less than a thousand in Philadelphia.

Governors in Pennsylvania and New Jersey opened up emergency operations centers to respond to life-threatening storm conditions. New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy pleaded with residents not to go outside for the next 12 to 15 hours until the storm cleared the state.

Severe storms and tornadoes led to widespread damage and power outages throughout South Jersey. NBC10's Matt DeLucia has the latest on the conditions.

4 Killed Amid Widespread Destruction Caused by Floods, Tornadoes of Ida (2024)

FAQs

4 Killed Amid Widespread Destruction Caused by Floods, Tornadoes of Ida? ›

For the latest on Ida's impacts on the Philadelphia region, click here. At least four people died in the greater Philadelphia area as a result of severe storms that pummeled the region, bringing widespread flooding, hundreds of water rescues and at least seven tornadoes.

Why did Ida cause so much flooding? ›

Ida's extreme rainfall broke records and flooded basem*nt apartments. When Hurricane Ida hit New York City in September 2021, rain fell faster than it could drain away through storm water infrastructure. This caused unprecedented inland flooding, especially in low-lying areas and basem*nt apartments.

When was Ida flood? ›

The remnants of the storm produced unexpectedly severe damage in the Northeastern United States on September 1–2. Several intense tornadoes and catastrophic flash flooding swept through the entire region, which had already been impacted by several tropical cyclones, Elsa, Fred, and Henri during July and August.

How many people died from Hurricane Ida? ›

Fast facts: Hurricane Ida

The storm's landfall coincided with the 16th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina's landfall in southeast Louisiana and Mississippi in 2005. As of September 2021, Hurricane Ida had resulted in 91 deaths across nine states.

How did Ida affect the environment? ›

In total, the assessment of Hurricane Ida-related release data shows that there were 2,230 pollution events that occurred directly or indirectly because of the hurricane (Fig. 1). Among those were 171 oil spills involving at least 5,436 barrels (229,633 gallons) cumulatively.

How much damage did Hurricane Ida cause? ›

Is Hurricane Ida as Strong as Katrina?
KatrinaIda
Wind speed (miles per hour)125150
Storm surge (meters)3.74.9
Deaths1833107
Economic damage$ 176 billion$ 75 billion
1 more row
Jan 30, 2023

How many people died in the NYC flooding? ›

The storm, which hit just two years after flooding from the remnants of Hurricane Ida battered the five boroughs and killed at least 13 people in the city, laid bare how vulnerable the Big Apple's aging infrastructure is to extreme weather events that are intensified by climate change.

How many homes were destroyed in Hurricane Ida? ›

17,000 homes that were in fair condition prior to the storm saw minor damage, while 15,000 homes that were in fair or poor condition became severely damaged.

How did Hurricane Ida affect the water? ›

Hurricane Ida was a historic flooding event for the state of Pennsylvania with 5-10 inches of rain falling in a little over six hours, swelling many small creeks and several main branch rivers well above their banks.

What made Hurricane Ida so strong? ›

How did the storm have so much staying power? It basically didn't know it was over land, meteorologists say. Hurricanes draw their energy from warm ocean waters. But when they make landfall over a wet, marshy, or saturated spot, they can still power themselves with evaporating moisture.

Why did Hurricane Ida intensify so quickly? ›

The storm's path happened to track over this warm water, what scientists call an eddy, said Chris Slocum, a NOAA researcher. “Ida found the perfect path across the gulf, where the warmest water is,” he said, and that provided plenty of energy for the storm to extract.

What were the effects of Hurricane Ida in New Jersey? ›

New Jersey

Newark International Airport was shut down, cancelling more than 400 flights, and shutting down the airport parking lot. Ida significantly contributed to Newark's wettest September on record. In Millburn, Essex County, the Rahway River overflowed its banks, flooding the downtown area.

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