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Irene causes heavy flooding in Vermont


Hurricane Irene plowed into Vermont on Sunday causing heavy rain, flash floods and wind gusts of up to 60 mph, leaving some residents stranded and others rushing to higher ground. 
The soil was already saturated from a wet spring and soaking rains just last week.
Irene arrived quicker than expected and its unpredictabile path made it difficult to determine the areas where residents should be evacuated, said Mark Bosma, a spokesman for Vermont’s Emergency Operations Center.
 “We didn’t know where the storm was going to hit,” Bosma said. “Vermont being so mountainous –- you never know if it’s going to fall on the east side of the mountains or the west side of the mountains. It could come spilling down either side. Evacuations beforehand just weren’t possible.”
He added that some individual towns began evacuating before the flooding started. 
“The National Weather Service told us that all major rivers and streams had the potential to flood –- many of them have, and are, and probably will still going into the evening,” Bosma said.  

 Emergency management officials began getting calls about “massive flooding”  before 9 a.m. Sunday. A 20-year-old woman was swept away in the Deerfield River in southern Vermont and is presumed dead.
 Some of the worst flooding was along the Winooski River, which begins in Cabot and flows about 90 miles to Lake Champlain. The Winooski was getting dangerously close even to the state’s emergency management center in Waterbury:
“I’m looking behind us and it’s starting to creep toward us,” Bosma said.
State authorities' main focus was evacuating residents in flooded areas. Swift water rescue teams responded to calls throughout the day Sunday, and the National Guard brought in high water trucks that were dispatched upstate.
“Even with all those assets we haven’t been able to get to everyone yet,” Bosma said. “Some people have just had to wait it out until the water subsided.”
Bosma said residents from low-lying areas were being advised to stay with friends who live on higher ground, “but on the other side of the coin, if you don’t need to be on the roads — stay off the roads.”

 “People are becoming stranded on the road when they hit floodwaters,” Bosma said, “and there just aren’t enough emergency responders to get to everyone.” 

Cleanup Under Way to Restore Power to Millions


Thousands of repair workers began clearing tree branches and repairing electrical lines to restore power to almost 6 million U.S. homes and businesses after Hurricane Irene left a trail of destruction from North Carolina to Maine.
The recovery effort will take days, and in some cases weeks, as flooding from Irene’s torrential rains still threatens electrical infrastructure, said Philip Bediant, a professor of civil engineering at Rice University in Houston.
Nearly one million customers lost power in New York, where Irene made landfall yesterday, according to a 1 p.m. report from New York Governor Andrew Cuomo’s office. Irene did not pack the hurricane force winds that were predicted for the region.
“It could have been a lot worse in terms of storm surge, could have been worse in terms of the actual wind speeds,” Bediant said. “It did not strengthen like they originally thought.”
Falling trees dragged down power lines while a storm surge flooded substations, cutting electricity supplies to 471,000 customers on Long Island, said Michael Hervey, chief operating officer of Long Island Power Authority, during a conference call with reporters.
Power disruptions affected almost 6 million homes and businesses in 13 states and the District of Columbia, the U.S. Energy Departmentsaid in a report yesterday. Irene first hit the coast of North Carolina as a Category 1 hurricane Aug. 27. More than 800,000 customers were without power in Virginia and Maryland, and about 116,000 in Maine, the Energy Department said.

Gloria and Isabel

Downgraded to a tropical storm yesterday as the tempest moved through New England on its way to Canada, Irene drew comparisons to Hurricanes Gloria in 1985 and Isabel in 2003. Hurricane Gloria, which followed a similar path in 1985, left 750,000 customers without power in Long Island, Hervey said.
Damage was lighter in New York City, where Mayor Michael Bloomberg allowed residents evacuated from low-lying areas to begin returning yesterday afternoon after the storm passed. The mayor is founder and majority owner of Bloomberg News parent Bloomberg LP.
About 120,000 Consolidated Edison Inc. (ED) customers were without power at 6:45 p.m. local time, said Chris Olert, a company spokesman. About 52,000 homes and businesses in Westchester County were without power, while outages were reported in Queens, Staten Island, Brooklyn and the Bronx.

Two-part Event

Consolidated Edison expects to restore power to most of its New York City customers by late on Aug. 30, and to most of its Westchester customers by the end of Sept. 1, Olert said.
“This was a two-part event for Con Edison -- water and wind,” John Miksad, the company’s senior vice president of electric operations, said on a conference call with reporters yesterday.
Hervey of Long Island Power couldn’t say when repair work will be completed. The company is assessing wind damage to downed high-voltage lines, and possible tornado and flood damage to infrastructure across Long Island.
About 1,500 of the utility’s workers were scouting damage on Long Island yesterday as 2,000 linemen and tree-trimmers began to restore power, Hervey said. Long Island Power is requesting additional workers from its peers in states not affected by Irene.
“I just don’t know how long it will take,” Hervey said of the repair effort.

Second-worst Storm

About half of the 2.4 million customers Dominion Resources Inc. serves in Virginia and North Carolina lost power, making Irene the second-worst storm in the company’s history after Hurricane Isabel in 2003, said Chet Wade, a company spokesman, in a telephone interview.
Irene’s eye-wall winds lashed the eastern edge of Dominion’s service area, while tropical-storm force winds pounded Richmond for about 12 hours Aug. 27, before the storm sped up the coast over night, Wade said.
“It was close to its peak in wind speed and it stayed the longest” over Virginia, Wade said.
By 8 p.m., Dominion had reduced the number of customers without power to 738,000 from 1.2 million. The more than 6,000 workers deployed in the repair effort focused first on restoring power to hospitals and other public health and safety facilities, the Richmond, Virginia-based company said in an e- mailed statement.
The company will have a damage report and assessment of how long it will take to restore power by noon today, Wade said.

Maryland Power Losses

More than 611,000 Baltimore Gas and Electric Co. customers lost power during the storm and its aftermath, said company spokeswoman Rachael Lighty in a telephone interview. About 700,000 customers lost power during Isabel.
“We were prepared for the worst and that’s pretty much what we got,” Lighty said.
Two nuclear reactors, one in New Jersey and one in Maryland, were shut by the storm. None of the reactors in the storm’s path lost power from the grid as of noon, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission said.
One of the two reactors at Constellation Energy Group Inc. (CEG)’s Calvert Cliffs nuclear station in Lusby, Maryland, shut automatically when the plant was hit by wind-driven debris. The plant’s second reactor is operating at full capacity.
Exelon Corp. (EXC)’s Oyster Creek plant in Toms River, New Jersey, shut Aug. 27 in anticipation of hurricane-force winds, Exelon said in a statement.
Pennsylvania and Connecticut each had more than 600,000 customers with no electricity, and there were more than 810,000 in New Jersey with no power as of 3 p.m. local time, according to the Energy Department report.

New Jersey Cleanup

Public Service Electric & Gas Co., which provides power to nearly three-quarters of New Jersey, was preparing to send about 6,000 workers to begin restoring power to 375,000 customers without electricity as of 7:30 p.m. local time, Deann Muzikar, spokeswoman for theNewark, New Jersey-based utility, said in a telephone interview. The effort should take five to seven days as workers repair downed power lines as well as underground natural-gas distribution equipment damaged by flooding, she said.

Obama's Approval Rating Drops to Lowest Ever, According to Gallup


The poll released Sunday says 39 percent of Americans approve of Obama’s performance, while 54 percent disapprove.
The slide comes as Obama launches a political counteroffensive this week, while he’s weighed down by wilting support among some of his most ardent backers, a stunted economy and a daily bashing from the slew of Republicans campaigning for his job.
"We've still got a long way to go to get to where we need to be. We didn't get into this mess overnight, and it's going to take time to get out of it," the president told the U.S. over the weekend, all but pleading for people to stick with him.
A deeply unsettled political landscape, with voters in a fiercely anti-incumbent mood, is framing the 2012 presidential race 15 months before Americans decide whether to give Obama a second term or hand power to the Republicans. Trying to ride out what seems to be an unrelenting storm of economic anxiety, people in the United States increasingly are voicing disgust with most all of the men and women, Obama included, they sent to Washington to govern them.
The Democratic president will try to ease voter worries and sustain his resurrected fighting spirit when he sets off Monday on a bus tour of Minnesota, Iowa and Illinois. The trip is timed to dilute the buzz emanating from the Midwest after Republicans gathered in Iowa over the weekend for a first test of the party's White House candidates. The state holds the nation's first nominating test in the long road toward choosing Obama's opponent.
The three-day tracking poll was conducted from Aug. 11-13. The margin of error is plus or minus 3 percentage points, according to Gallup.

Top tier emerges as GOP nomination race enters a defining phase


The new top tier of Republican presidential contenders has emerged to reset the 2012 race and raise new questions about exactly where an angry GOP base will take the party in next year's election.

The contest is now a three-way, multilayered match, withRick Perry and Michele Bachmann rising to challenge each other and national front-runner Mitt Romney, after the Texas governor formally declared his candidacy and the Minnesota congresswoman won the year's biggest organizing test.

Bachmann and Perry capitalized on their new prominence by appearing together for the first time at a party dinner in Waterloo, Iowa, late Sunday. The event opened a new and potentially defining phase of the nomination race: their head-to-head battle for the social and religious conservatives who dominate early-state caucuses and primaries.

Those tests, it seems increasingly clear, will be decided by an electorate fed up with Washington's dysfunction and deeply worried that the U.S. is in decline economically and as a world power.

Party activists in Iowa, in a warning to the establishment of both major parties, forced Tim Pawlenty to abruptly quit the race Sunday, by dealing him a weak third-place finish in a straw poll Saturday that boosted Bachmann to the head of the field in the leadoff caucus state.

Pawlenty said on ABC's "This Week" that voters were "looking for something different" from what he was offering as "a rational, established" two-term Minnesota governor with a "strong record of results, based on experience governing." Other Republicans said his low-key, guy-next-door image was no match for Bachmann's crowd-pleasing fire.

Bachmann said Republican voters were sending "a strong message to Washington." They "want us to get our house in order, financially speaking" and "they want someone who is going to fight for them," she said on CBS' "Face the Nation."

Candidates from the party's establishment wing who had been expected to challenge for the nomination have been faltering in the early going. Besides Pawlenty, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. have failed to take off, though the latter two remain in the race.

Rep. Steve King, an Iowa Republican who is among Bachmann's closest friends in Congress, noted that establishment candidates fared poorly in the straw ballot, drawing only about 1 in 5 votes cast by nearly 17,000 Iowans.

That reflected, in part, a decision by Romney and Huntsman not to compete aggressively at the event. Still, Bachmann and others, including the second-place finisher, Rep. Ron Paul of Texas, are tapping a strong undercurrent of outrage over business as usual in Washington. And those taking part in the straw poll almost certainly represent the social and evangelical Christian conservatives who will be a majority at the caucuses next winter.

"The debt ceiling vote is part of the long continuum of Republicans not standing up to do the hard things necessary" to turn the country around, said King, one of the most conservative House members, criticizing GOP members who, unlike himself and Bachmann, agreed to raise the debt limit this month. Bachmann supporters "know she will do the hard things."

In Waterloo, both Perry and Bachmann played to outsider sentiment by defending "tea party"activists.

"The tea party has been the best antidote to the out-of-control spending we have seen," Bachmann said. "The tea party has done something else for us too. They pointed out the unbelievable level of debt we have."

Perry, making his first stop in Iowa, faulted those who say the tea party is "angry."

"We're indignant at the arrogance and audacity this administration is showing about the values that are important to the people of America. We're indignant about a government that borrows trillions of dollars because they don't have the courage to say no," he told Republicans gathered for a party fundraiser.

Neither candidate addressed the other; Bachmann arrived after Perry spoke, and when she concluded her speech Perry quickly left the building without shaking her hand.

At a campaign stop earlier Sunday in Manchester, N.H., Perry said that he was "one of those citizens in this country that is very frustrated with a federal government that does not listen."

The governor also took a swipe at Romney, telling New Hampshire's largest TV station that Texas' record of job growth under his leadership "doesn't need any propping up," an allusion to Massachusetts' low rate of job creation while Romney was governor.

That jab was an early illustration of Perry's intention to challenge Romney and Bachmann at the same time. If he succeeds, he could be well-positioned to build a substantial edge once the primaries begin, albeit at the risk of coming under a dual assault.

Perry's entry poses a difficult challenge for Romney, who has been skirting Iowa, where he lost to former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee in 2008 despite an expensive, all-out effort.

The Texas governor will fill the void left by Pawlenty for "a serious candidate who could actually become president," said Tim Albrecht, communications director for Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad, a Republican.

Perry will likely have the financial resources that Pawlenty lacked, which finally drove him from the race, as well as the potential to build support among both evangelical Christians and fiscal conservatives.

Bachmann, alternately, could get the jump on the field if she can hold off Perry and transfer her success in Iowa to other early-voting states, especially South Carolina and Florida.

GOP strategist Mike Murphy, a former Romney aide, said the Massachusetts governor faced "a tough call" in Iowa. Murphy said Romney might be able to eke out a caucus win if conservatives divide their votes among Bachmann, Perry and others. Or the populist anger spurred by economic distress could spread from activist events into the presidential primaries, with unpredictable results.