Most of the places hit in CT were not in flood zones. While some houses were next to streams, a lot of properties weren't. They were downhill from streams that overflowed and created new streams, or the stream overflowed into the street which turned into a river. It's not a building permit, urbanization or overdevelopment problem. It's a massive amount of rain in a short period of time, rushing down hills, meeting up in either existing streams or creating new ones problem, aka laws of nature. We've seen this happen now in Upstate NY, VT, NH, CT and LI this year. And none of it from tropical systems.
Catastrophic flooding leaves trails of destruction some cleanup efforts in Connecticut 🇺🇸 and New York 🇺🇸 after a deadly flooding rocks in northeast. 🌊
Well it's good to know that we have a state of emergency no one's going to help where's the president isn't he supposed to be first on I'm trying to help us
FEMA will be reimbursing legal CT residents for their lodging expenses as well as rebuilding their homes even though they could have bought flood insurance.
“Legal” CT residents shouldn’t be building in flood zones, Americans don’t take proper precautions until it’s too late. Most Americans are apathetic towards the weather and climate change, it’s their own fault. “Legal” CT residents should have been demanding more from their local government before the immigrants got there. Y’all should be mad at yourselves
@@clyde4296 Electing trump and supporting radical conservative ideologies whose beliefs refuse to acknowledge climate change and increasingly abnormal weather phenomena isn’t going to help people when disaster strikes. This has nothing to do with immigration and everything to do with preparedness.