RICHMOND, Va. – The East Coast’s recovery from Hurricane Isabel was dealt a setback Tuesday by another round of storms that caused renewed flooding, flattened trees that had withstood the hurricane and knocked out power to thousands of customers, some for the second time.
A tornado with winds of nearly 70 mph touched down along a four-county path that crossed Richmond.
“Isabel was gravy compared to this guy,” Richmond resident James Whitaker said. “We went down and got in the closet downstairs and stayed in it.”
No injuries were reported from the twister, part of a weather system that also caused damage in Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Isabel was blamed for at least 38 deaths, 23 of them in Virginia.
About 40,000 customers lost power in Virginia on Tuesday, some for the second time since Isabel struck last week.
“I just restocked my refrigerator last night. This is just so unreal,” said Renee Knight, whose neighborhood lost power during Isabel for about 20 hours.
Before the storms arrived, Virginia’s main utility, Dominion Virginia Power, said it had restored electricity to two-thirds of the 1.8 million customers who lost service during Isabel.
The storms dumped about 4 inches of rain in parts of Maryland, where some of the same roads flooded by Isabel were under water again, and some schools closed.
To the north, Tuesday’s storm blacked out about 20,000 customers in southern New Jersey and about 34,000 in Pennsylvania. Tornadoes were spotted in two New Jersey counties.
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