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12 Jul 2021 | 04:32 AM UTC

US: Adverse weather forecast across northeastern regions through at least early July 14

Heavy rainfall, strong winds, hail, and possible flooding forecast across northeastern US through at least early July 14.

Warning

Event

Thunderstorms with rounds of heavy rainfall, strong winds, and possible flooding are forecast to occur across portions of the northeastern US through at least early July 14. The affected area includes Connecticut, far southern Maine, far northern Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, southeastern New York, Pennsylvania, southern New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and southern Vermont.

The Storm Prediction Center (SPC) has issued a "Slight Risk" (Level 2 on a 5-tier scale) forecast for severe weather for eastern Pennsylvania and far northern Maryland through early July 12. However, storms in this region are not forecast to be widespread or long-lived. Isolated intense storms are possible, which may contain hail, damaging winds, and a few tornadoes.

The Weather Prediction Center (WPC) has issued a "Slight Risk" for excessive rainfall for far northwestern Massachusetts, far northern New Jersey, southeastern New York, eastern Pennsylvania, far southern Vermont through early July 14. Additionally, officials with the National Weather Service (NWS) have issued flash flood and flood watches and warnings for Connecticut, far southern Maine, Massachusetts, southern New Hampshire, northern New Jersey, southeastern New York, Rhode Island, and southern Vermont. Officials could update and possibly extend the coverage of the relevant weather alerts over the coming days.

Hazardous Conditions
The storms will be capable of producing heavy downpours, damaging winds, hail, and tornadoes across the affected area through at least early July 14. Should sustained heavy rainfall occur, it could trigger flooding in low-lying communities near rivers, streams, and creeks. Urban flooding is also possible in developed areas with easily overwhelmed or a lack of stormwater drainage systems. Sites located downstream from large reservoirs or rivers may be subject to flash flooding after relatively short periods of intense rainfall. Landslides are possible in hilly or mountainous areas, especially where the soil has become saturated by heavy rainfall. Disruptions to electricity and telecommunications services are possible where significant flooding, landslides, or strong winds impact utility networks.

Transport
Floodwaters and debris flows could render some bridges, rail networks, or roadways impassable, impacting overland travel around affected areas. Ponding on road surfaces could cause hazardous driving conditions on regional highways. Authorities could temporarily close some low-lying routes that become inundated by floodwaters.

Severe weather could also trigger intermittent flight delays and cancellations at regional airports, though these are unlikely to be severe or prolonged. Flooding could block regional rail lines; freight and passenger train delays and cancellations are possible in areas that see heavy rainfall and potential track inundation. Localized business disruptions may occur in low-lying areas.

Advice

Monitor local media for weather updates and related advisories. Out of an abundance of caution, confirm all transport reservations and business appointments before travel. Make allowances for localized travel delays and potential supply chain disruptions where flooding has been forecast. Do not drive on flooded roads. Charge battery-powered devices in the case of prolonged electricity outages.

Resources

US National Weather Service (NWS)
US Road Conditions