long island news

5 Towns fails to hold back new flood waters

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Snow from recent storms melted and combined with high tides to create severe flooding in the low-lying areas of the Five Towns last week, leaving local leaders hoping government agencies could help mitigate this recurring problem.

Areas that were especially susceptible to the flooding included Meadowmere Park; Peninsula Boulevard, from Rockaway Turnpike to Arbuckle Avenue in Cedarhurst; the intersection of West Broadway and Taft Avenue, and Bayswater Boulevard, in Inwood; and state Route 878, the Nassau Expressway.

Severely impacted by Hurricane Sandy, Meadowmere Park continues to endure flooding, according to resident Diane Kirchner.

“During the last flood, we received about 16 inches of water,” she said, referring to the Feb. 8–9 snowstorm. “There was no way out or in, and we were stranded. No kids went to schools. Our fire trucks couldn’t go in or out.”

But there are no new mitigation projects scheduled for this community near Jamaica Bay. “The town does not have any planned drainage projects in these areas currently,” said Town of Hempstead spokeswoman Susan Trenkle-Pokalsky. “The town and county did a grade raise for Meadowmere Park roads about 15 years ago.” 

Kirchner said she remembered that project. It made a difference, she said, but the entire residential area still floods, especially after big storms and during high tides. “We used to get flooded every three to five days before that,” she said.

There was also flooding last week about a mile from Meadowmere Park, along Rockaway Turnpike and Peninsula Boulevard, and from there to Arbuckle Avenue in Cedarhurst. The village’s mayor, Benjamin Weinstock, said that programs like New York Rising are working to help implement flood-mitigation projects.

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