You are reading

Queens Storm Death Toll Rises to 11 After Three Bodies Found in Flooded Flushing Basement: NYPD

The home on Peck Avenue where three people were found dead Thursday (Google Maps)

Sept. 3, 2021 By Allie Griffin

The death toll of Hurricane Ida rose to 13 citywide — including 11 fatalities in Queens — after more bodies were discovered Thursday.

The NYPD confirmed the deaths of three more people in a flooded basement apartment in East Flushing just before noon Thursday.

Their deaths brought the number of Queens fatalities up to 11 from eight previously confirmed deaths.

The deceased’s landlord made the gruesome discovery when he visited the building at 153-10 Peck Ave. near Kissena Park to access storm damage Thursday morning, AMNY reported.

The three people — two women and a man — were pronounced dead at the scene. Police have not yet released their identities.

They are among 10 Queens residents who died when stormwater flooded basement apartments across the borough.

Multiple family members died together in several of the incidents.

For instance, a two-year-old boy and his parents died in their flooded basement-level home in Woodside and a mother and her adult son died when their basement-level home in Jamaica was flooded as well.

A 48-year-old woman also died in basement apartment in Forest Hills, as did an 86-year-old woman in Elmhurst.

An 11th person was found dead in a burned out car on the Grand Central Parkway Thursday morning. Police believe the vehicle was involved in an earlier collision caused by the storm and resulting flooding along the parkway.

NYPD Chief of Department Rodney Harrison said the record-shattering storm was the worst he had seen since Hurricane Sandy in 2012.

“This is one of the most difficult storms I’ve seen in my thirty years,” he said at a press conference Thursday evening.

The remnants of Hurricane Ida brought with it the greatest single-hour rainfall in New York City history. The storm turned city roadways into rivers, swamped the subway system and filled apartments and businesses with several feet of water.

Harrison said many more lives would have been lost without the heroic efforts of the NYPD and other first responders.

Officers performed 69 water rescues citywide, including 20 in Queens — with the vast majority at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadows Corona Park.

They rescued a further 166 people in need of assistance throughout the city and assisted the evacuation of 835 subway passengers along the 4, 6, R, N and E lines.

In one incident, the NYPD Emergency Service Unit rescued numerous motorists who were stuck in water along the Grand Central Parkway near Flushing Meadows Corona Park. The officers got all the drivers and passengers — including a 94-year-old man who suffered hypothermia — to safety.

The NYPD also moved nearly 500 abandoned vehicles to safer ground across the five boroughs, Harrison said.

Officers are continuing to survey and perform wellness check in areas that were greatly impacted by the storm, he added.

The losses to New Yorkers’ home and businesses are expected to be far-reaching.

President Joseph Biden approved New York State’s emergency declaration late Thursday in a move that will provide federal support to the recovery effort.

The action authorizes the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to coordinate disaster relief efforts and offer monetary aid, equipment, personnel and supplies to supplement localities’ efforts. It will also help people find temporary housing and provide funeral assistance.

email the author: news@queenspost.com

10 Comments

Click for Comments 
Denise

This storm was something else
The water went chest high …folks scrambling to save pets.
It left our area devastated especially the alley residences.
Wow I canvassed the neighborhood to hear the stories..everyone putting out water sogged items
A neighbor around the corner i was told had her baby in the car ..came early due to the stress
God bless all affected especially my neighbors..

4
1
Reply
Jani

I thought all the homeless on the street would of been the causalities. I guess they all fled to another borough before the storm.

2
1
Reply
Sherry

I feel like progressives have been screaming climate change is real for the last 10 years and Now democrats are finally catching on.??‍♀️?

1
6
Reply
Everything changes.

Explain to me the science behind “climate change” causing poor drainage in urban areas? Did “climate change” also rent out illegal basement apartments as well?

2
1
Reply
Fox News was wrong about early police retirement, NYC losing population and spread the election lies

Everything- My house has no illegal basement apartment and we flooded. So did most the houses on our street and the first time for all of us and many of us have been here since the 1960’s. Illegal and low lying properties were not the only property types affected but illegal apartments were probably the only ones covered by Fox News.

3
2
Reply
Agatha

What have the city did to prepare for storm ? Absolutely nothing!! Now they offer condolences ?! Business as usual!!

2
1
Reply
Joe

Terrible, terrible, terrible. All of these progressive liberal politicians will start the blaming soon to get attention for themselves. These floods have happened before. Why couldn’t these councilmen or assemblymen or state senators have started programs in their neighborhoods alerting people who lived in these basement apartments to evacuate if there was a heavy rain. If you will wait for the city to fix the sewers a lot more people will die. But of course it’s easier to jump on your high horse and start screaming how morally superior you are to everyone else. Let’s mourn for these poor innocent people who were alive last week and didn’t expect this. Also everyone sign up for Notify New York and you will get call if there are emergencies. You don’t have to give a credit card number.

4
1
Reply
Mixie

That’s not true.

This level of rain in this short a period has never happened before. Climate destruction is real and it’s now and it’s an emergency.

3
1
Reply

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

City Council passes bill shifting broker fee burden to landlords, sparking backlash from real estate industry and key critics

Nov. 14, 2024 By Ethan Stark-Miller and QNS News Team

The New York City Council passed a landmark bill on Wednesday, aiming to relieve renters of paying hefty broker fees — a cost that will now fall on the party who hires the listing agent. Known as the FARE Act (Fairness in Apartment Rentals), the legislation passed with a veto-proof majority of 42-8, despite opposition from Republicans and conservative Democrats.