New York under state of emergency after storms flood subways and strand drivers
- Governor Kathy Hochul warned of a ‘dangerous, life-threatening storm’, and local transit authorities urged residents to stay home if they could
- Flooding also caused flight delays at LaGuardia Airport and forced the closure of one of three terminals

Rain walloped the New York metropolitan area with a startling punch Friday, knocking out several subway and commuter rail lines, stranding drivers on highways, flooding basements and shuttering a terminal at LaGuardia Airport for hours in one of the city’s wettest days in decades.
More than 18.41cm (7.25 inches) of rain had fallen in parts of Brooklyn by nightfall, with at least one spot seeing 6cm (2.5 inches) in a single hour, according to weather and city officials. The 21.97cm (8.65 inches) at John F. Kennedy Airport surpassed its record for any September day, a bar set during Hurricane Donna in 1960, the National Weather Service said.
And more downpours were expected.
Although no deaths or severe injuries have been reported so far from Friday’s storm, it stirred frightening memories.