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March 8, 2024 — The New York City Emergency Management Department (NYCEM) today placed New York City communities under a Travel Advisory to elevate their readiness levels in anticipation of coastal flooding Saturday, March 9, to Sunday, March 10. The agency recommends New Yorkers—particularly those residing or operating businesses in coastal areas—remain alert and take preparedness actions.
Strong offshore winds in combination with a new moon will result in higher than normal water levels near and along the coast during several high tide cycles from tomorrow morning to Sunday morning, the worst of which is expected Saturday evening and Sunday morning. Additionally, as a storm moves through the region tomorrow, periods of moderate to briefly heavy rain Saturday evening may exacerbate flooding along the shore. Significant inland flooding due to heavy rainfall is not expected, although minor rainfall flooding will be possible in low-lying and poor drainage areas.
The National Weather Service has issued several citywide flood alerts for potential flooding. In southern Queens, a Coastal Flood Watch is in effect from 6:00 p.m. Saturday to 1:00 p.m. Sunday to account for flooding during two high tide cycles on Saturday evening and again Sunday morning. The Bronx and northern Queens are also under a Coastal Flood Watch valid from 9:00 p.m. Saturday to 1:00 a.m. Sunday for flooding during one tide cycle. In these areas, 1 to 2 feet of water, with up to 3 feet in a worst case scenario, is expected to result in widespread flooding of areas near the shore, including roads, parking lots, parks, and homes and businesses with basements near the waterfront. Numerous road closures are likely, and vehicles parked in vulnerable areas near the waterfront will likely become flooded.
Coastal Flood Statements are also in effect for Brooklyn, Manhattan, southern Queens, and Staten Island for minor flooding tomorrow morning with up to 1 foot of flooding possible along vulnerable shorelines. High tides in these areas will peak around 7:00 a.m. tomorrow.
Areas currently under a Watch may be upgraded to Coastal Flood Warnings tomorrow, while additional Coastal Flood Advisories or Statements will be possible for all other city shorelines tomorrow evening and again Sunday morning.
A prolonged period of gusty winds is also expected this weekend into early next week. Winds will ramp up tomorrow evening to gusts of 30 to 40 MPH with peak gusts of 45 mph possible along the coast. Gusts of 30 to 40 MPH will continue throughout the day Sunday into Monday morning and may further increase on Monday afternoon, with peak gusts up to 50 MPH possible into the evening. Periods of strong winds may result in loose items being blown around, hazardous driving for high profile vehicles, downed trees and tree limbs, and potential power outages.
NYCEM is collaborating with the National Weather Service and monitoring the latest forecasts, particularly the potential for coastal flooding. To ensure real-time awareness and a coordinated response, NYCEM is organizing specialized interagency briefings to keep essential stakeholders well-informed of emerging risks, fine-tune operational strategies specific to coastal flooding, and reinforcing its readiness for scaled-up emergency responses should conditions warrant. Critical assets and specialized units are on standby prepared for activation as conditions necessitate. Roads, parking lots, and properties in low-lying areas near the shoreline could potentially experience minor flooding.
NYCEM recommends the following preparedness actions for New Yorkers for those in coastal flood-prone regions and low-lying areas:
NYCEM will continue to provide New Yorkers with the most current information and guidelines as conditions develop.
For more safety tips, visit NYC.gov/SevereWeather. Before and during an emergency, the City will send emergency alerts and updates to New Yorkers through various channels including Notify NYC, the City's free emergency notification system. Through Notify NYC, New Yorkers can receive phone calls, text messages, and/or emails alerts about traffic and transit disruptions and other emergencies. Sign up for Notify NYC to receive free emergency alerts and updates in your preferred language by visiting NYC.gov/NotifyNYC, calling 311 (212-639-9675 for Video Relay Service, or TTY: 212-504-4115), following @NotifyNYC on Twitter, or getting the free Notify NYC mobile application for your Apple or Android device.
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