NEW YORK - A nor'easter battered the East with strong wind and pouring rain
Sunday, grounding hundreds of airline flights, downing power lines and
threatening severe coastal flooding.
 Streets are shown underwater in Danville, W.Va., Sunday,
April 15, 2007, after overnight storms flooded many out of their homes in
Southern West Virginia. [AP]

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The storm flooded people out
of their homes in the middle of the night in West Virginia and trapped others.
Some New Jersey shore residents evacuated, and officials in Connecticut urged
some residents along the Long Island Sound to do the same. Inland areas from
eastern New York to Maine faced a threat of heavy snow.
One person was killed in South Carolina as dozens of mobile homes were
destroyed or damaged by wind. The storm system already had been blamed for five
deaths on Friday in Kansas and Texas.
Storm warnings and watches were posted all along the East Coast, with coastal
flood watches from Maryland to Maine through at least Monday morning.
More than 5.5 inches of rain fell in the New York region Sunday, shattering
the record for the date of 1.8 inches set in 1906, according to the
National Weather Service. Weather service meteorologist Gary Conte said
Sunday night's high tide was likely to bring coastal flooding on Long Island and
in parts of New York City.
Connecticut's emergency management commissioner, James Thomas, was expecting
most of the problems to come Sunday night with the high tide.
"We are prepared to deliver sandbags, assist with an evacuation, or whatever
we need to do," Thomas said. "We're kind of all sitting back, getting prepared
and hoping it doesn't get as bad as it has been in different parts of the
country."
In New York, flooding stalled traffic along parkways and forced residents in
at least one Queens neighborhood to paddle through streets in boats. In the
coastal Seagate section of Brooklyn, which suffered major flooding in a December
1992 nor'easter, residents placed sandbags in the streets.
"Everybody remembers that (1992 storm)," resident Jose Serrano (news, bio,
voting record) said. "Everybody's home got ruined. Some houses got underwater.
It was up to your stomach."
Airlines canceled more than 400 flights at the New York area's three major
airports, said Steve Coleman, a spokesman for the Port Authority of New York and
New Jersey. Kennedy Airport, on the wind-exposed south side of Long Island, had
sustained wind of 30 to 35 mph with gusts to 48 mph, Conte said.
Fire Island Ferries suspended service to the island, off the south shore of
Long Island, and the Metro-North Railroad suspended service on its Harlem and
New Haven lines for several hours because of flooding in the Mott Haven section
of the Bronx.
The Coast Guard had warned mariners to head for port because wind up to 55
mph was expected to generate seas up to 20 feet high, Petty Officer Etta Smith
said in Boston.
A tornado touched down in the central part of South Carolina, killing one
person, seriously injuring four others and cutting a 300-yard swath of
destruction in Sumter County, officials said. A second tornado touched down near
Lynchburg.
The storm caused flash flooding in the mountains of southern West Virginia,
where emergency services personnel rescued nearly two dozen people from homes
and cars in Logan and Boone counties early Sunday. Two people were unaccounted
for and others were trapped in their homes.
"Our houses sit in the middle of the hill, and it's all around us. I'm
surrounded, it's like a lake completely around us," said Samantha Walker, 29,
who was visiting her grandmother in Matheny. "We can't get out even if we wanted
to get out."
The storm forced the postponement of six major league baseball games Sunday ¡ª
the most in a single day in a decade - and gave runners in Monday's Boston
Marathon something to worry about besides Heartbreak Hill. The race-day forecast
called for 3 to 5 inches of rain, start temperatures in the 30s and wind gusts
of up to 25 mph.
Heavy rain and thunderstorms extended from Florida up the coast to New
England on Sunday. Wind gusted to 71 mph at Charleston, S.C., the weather
service said.
Major flooding was forecast in parts of eastern and central Pennsylvania,
where some rivers already were above flood state Sunday night.
Thousands of electricity customers lost power in states including New York,
Connecticut, New Jersey and North Carolina.
In New Jersey, 16 roadways throughout the state were either partially or
fully closed and traffic lights were malfunctioning in some areas, Kris Kolluri,
state Transportation Commissioner, said late Sunday afternoon.
Some residents of low-lying areas along the New Jersey shore packed up to
leave.
"This is going to be bad," Shaun Rheinheimer said as he moved furniture to
higher spots at his house on New Jersey's Cedar Bonnet Island.
Rain dumped 3 inches on eastern Kentucky, where a 50-foot section of highway
collapsed near Pikeville, said State Police Sgt. Jamey Kidd. No vehicles were
caught by the collapse, he said.
In central Florida, a tornado damaged mobile homes in Dundee but no injuries
were reported, police said.