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I think is raining heavily up there because I see flash flood warning’sWhat caused it? Busted water main? Lots of our mains are over 100 years old, shits be poppin' on the regular.
Might be interesting to research just how many have broken through the years.
I think is raining heavily up there because I see flash flood warning’s
https://www.google.com/amp/s/ny.cur...16/17242632/nyc-subway-mta-flooding-rainstormNah, bro. It's not raining that heavily. In fact it's barely raining at all where I am. That volume of water doesn't come from rain. Lemme do some checking.
New York subways with barometers to measure their elevation, and produced a 2008 report for the MTA, warning that many lines would flood with a storm surge of between seven and 13 feet. He urged policymakers to “muster the courage to think the almost unthinkable” and install flood defenses while considering whether, over the long term, climate change might necessitate radical alterations to the transit system, like moving back to elevated tracks. In 2011, while working on a government panel, Jacob produced a study that mapped how subway tunnels would be inundated in the event of a hurricane. The next year, he was proved right. After Sandy, Jacob was hailed as a prophet.
Sea-level rise poses a significant risk to New York's people, resources and economy. Especially when levels are rising rapidly, communities and individuals need science-based projections to evaluate risks and plan for adaptation.
- New York has experienced at least a foot of sea-level rise since 1900, mostly due to expansion of warming ocean water.
Rising sea levels from man-made climate change could prompt devastating, 8-foot floods that used to occur once every 500 years to happen once every 5 years by 2030 to 2045, the research said.
"Flooding in the nation’s largest city will be much higher and more frequent because sea levels will continue to rise at an accelerating rate," the study said.
Nah, bro. It's not raining that heavily. In fact it's barely raining at all where I am. That volume of water doesn't come from rain. Lemme do some checking.
If they've shutdown service then there is water on the tracks. I was victimized once using NYC subway, looks like deja vu.
I don't think you get around NYC too much....Okay. Turns out it was the rain. I've never seen it that bad unless a drain or two was blocked. Something smells fishy. I've been riding the subway my whole life and I've seen worse rain and it never affected the subway like that.
If they've shutdown service then there is water on the tracks. I was victimized once using NYC subway, looks like deja vu.
I don't think you get around NYC too much....
subways in flood zones and hill areas always flood during real heavy rain (+2 inches /hour)
It was steady rain all night and after 7a til just before the sun broke out for 5 mins after 10a or 11a -it was raining cats and dogsIf they've shutdown service then there is water on the tracks. I was victimized once using NYC subway, looks like deja vu.
nah man - you may go around- but you ain't really getting around... every heavy rain causes problems - since early 2000sYes, I didn't deny they've shutdown some service; what I said was there's something fishy going on. Rain or flood surges never effected service like this before.
I'm down there all the time. All over. And I have intimate knowledge of the subway. I'm telling y'all something doesn't add up.
Hurricane Sandy was the storm that got everyone attention to this problem but you are right the rain and the flooding started in the early 2000’s and got worse ever sincenah man - you may go around- but you ain't really getting around... every heavy rain causes problems - since early 2000s
in the 80s and 90s flooding wasn't a persistent problem, but some time after 2002 every heavy rain started to cause excessive street and subway flooding in more areas- before then I only saw flooding like that in hoods near wetlands/ swamp by JFK or College Point
Yes, I didn't deny they've shutdown some service; what I said was there's something fishy going on. Rain or flood surges never effected service like this before.
I'm down there all the time. All over. And I have intimate knowledge of the subway. I'm telling y'all something doesn't add up.
nah man - you may go around- but you ain't really getting around... every heavy rain causes problems - since early 2000s
in the 80s and 90s flooding wasn't a persistent problem, but some time after 2002 every heavy rain started to cause excessive street and subway flooding in more areas- before then I only saw flooding like that in hoods near wetlands/ swamp by JFK or College Point
I don't think you get around NYC too much....
subways in flood zones and hill areas always flood during real heavy rain (+2 inches /hour)
They didn't install these in the Bx and Qns as art
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same for Manhattan
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