Wrath of Irene causes East Coast to struggle for recovery

KILLINGTON, Vt. — Running low on food and money, Vermont residents stranded by flooded roads relied upon provisions dropped by National Guard troops to get by today while the rest of the East Coast labored to recover from the wrath of the hurricane-turned-tropical storm known as Irene.

At Killington Elementary School, residents came for a free hot dog and corn-on-the-cob. Jason and Angela Heaslip picked up a bag filled with peanut butter, cereal and toilet paper for their three children and three others who are visiting from Long Island.

“Right now, they’re getting little portions because we’re trying to make the food last,” said Jason Heaslip, who only has a dollar in his bank account because the resort where he works hasn’t been able to pay him due to the storm.

One flooded Vermont town still remained totally cut off from the outside world today, and National Guard Chinook and Black Hawk helicopters were still dropping supplies on storm-ravaged parts of the state. In places like Killington, residents were banding together to keep the community functioning. Some volunteered tractors to help remove mud and debris, while those with working electricity were letting neighbors use their showers.

Nearly 2 million people remained without power in water-logged homes and businesses from North Carolina through New England, where the storm has been blamed for at least 45 deaths in 13 states. Raging floodwaters continued to ravage parts of northern New Jersey this morning, even after the state’s rain-swollen rivers crested and slowly receded.

“It’s like an island now,” said Falguni Purohit, who owns the Killington Pico Motor Inn on Route 4 in Mendon, Vt., where her family and one guest are trapped. “We can’t go anywhere.”

The town of Rutland is 15 miles away but impossible to reach because of extensive road damage. Purohit said the family has power and plenty of food and water to keep them going, but no way of leaving. Nearly 11 inches of rain triggered the deluges, which knocked houses off their foundations, destroyed covered bridges and caused earthquake-style damage to infrastructure all over Vermont.

“We are dropping water, food and supplies, trying to help out folks who are hurting,” said U.S. Army national Guard Capt. David Fabricius, who was working at an airport in Fair Haven, Vt., where ground crews were loading provisions onto helicopters that recently had flown missions in Iraq.

Towns around New Jersey resembled large, soggy yard sales today as residents dragged flood-damaged belongings out onto lawns and into streets still muddied with floodwaters left behind by Hurricane Irene. In Wallington, a heart-shaped, one-square-mile town of about 12,000 residents, large sections remained inundated with floodwaters from the Passaic River, which winds around the small hamlet and hits it from several angles.

“Sunday morning the water was only up to here,” said resident Kevin O’Reilly, gesturing to where his front lawn used to meet the sidewalk. “Sunday afternoon, the waves were bouncing off the house, and that’s when it blew out the basement windows. It sounded like Niagara Falls. It just filled up immediately, and this is what we’ve been dealing with since then.”

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said Tuesday night that he saw “just extraordinary despair” after touring flooded areas.

Irene washed away large swaths of beach along Connecticut’s coast, leaving many residents concerned about ocean water closing in around their property. Emergency orders have been issued to allow coastal residents to immediately repair or shore up areas that threaten properties.

The Connecticut River at Hartford crested Tuesday evening at its highest level since 1987, according to Nicole Belk, a hydrologist with the National Weather Service, in Taunton, Mass. But she said levees helped minimize flooding in riverside communities.

Vermont’s largest electric utility says a convoy of line crews is headed for the town of Rochester — where a power substation was completely destroyed by flooding — to begin work to restore power. Officials say at least five Vermont schools are closed until further notice and about 120 have delayed opening for the school year because of roads or schools ravaged by flooding.

Flood control dams and basins that New England states installed after 1955 floods helped prevent a catastrophe in the lower Connecticut River basin, said Denise Ruzicka, director of inland water resources for Connecticut’s Department of Energy and Environmental Protection.

In Vermont, officials focused on providing basic necessities to residents who in many cases still have no power, no telephone service and no way to get in or out of their towns

Vermont National Guard choppers made three drops in Killington, Mendon, Pittsfield and Rochester Tuesday while 10 other towns received truck deliveries of food, blankets, tarps and water. Eight Black Hawk and Chinook helicopters from the Illinois National Guard are expected to arrive today to bolster the number of flights.

Volunteers in Windham, N.Y., helped 26-year-old Antonia Schreiber salvage the floors of the 200-year-old Victorian cottage she had transformed into a luxury day spa.

The ski town, high in the Catskill Mountains, was left under several feet of brick-red water Sunday night after a stony creek grew to a raging river fueled by a foot of rain.

“Friends, loved ones, people I don’t even know showed up with trucks, bulldozers and hugs,” she said as men and women scraped and mopped around her. “The magnitude of generosity and good will is just overwhelming.”

While East Coast residents measured the cost of the storm in waterlogged cars and ruined furniture, official predictions were more dire.

In North Carolina, where Irene blew ashore along the Outer Banks on Saturday before heading for New York and New England, Gov. Beverly Perdue said the hurricane destroyed more than 1,100 homes and caused at least $70 million in damage.

During a visit to the Catskill Mountains Today, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said he expects damage in the state to total $1 billion.

Early today, President Barack Obama declared a major disaster in New York, freeing up federal recovery funds for people in eight counties. Assistance can include grants for temporary housing and home repairs, low-cost loans to cover uninsured property losses, and other programs. Irene destroyed 500 to 600 homes and thousands of acres of farmland in upstate New York.

Total losses from the storm along the U.S. Atlantic Coast — including damage and expenses incurred by governments — are likely to be about $7 billion, according to Jan Vermeiren, CEO of Silver Spring, Md.-based risk consultant Kinetic Analysis Corp., which uses computer models to estimate storm losses.

 

-freep.com

Welcoming 2011 with a Big Sale!

Celebrating the New Year just gets better as Pacific Aircraft, Aviation Modelworks, Airforce Modelworks, Airplane Modelworks, and Military Modelworks take 15% off of regular-priced model airplanes!

 

Hurry and check out them out because promo runs until Jan. 30, 2011 only!

Colonel Dunlop:First Female Air Force Test Pilot

The Air Force says Colonel Dawn Dunlop was the first woman to fly an F-22 and becomes the “first female fighter test pilot to lead an Air Force wing” when, on June 4, she takes command of the 412th Test Wing at Edwards Air Force Base. Prior to 1993, the Air Force carried a ban on female fighter pilots.

In November of 2003, then Lieutenant Colonel Dunlop became the first woman to fly the Raptor after that year being assigned as operations officer for the F-22 Combined Test Force at Edwards. Dunlop will succeed Brig. Gen. William Thornton to assume her latest command.

Dunlop graduated from the Air Force Academy in 1988 and began her career as an instructor pilot in the T-38. Her work at Edwards has included test assignments in the F-15E as well as weapons upgrade programs and developmental testing of the F-22.

Her service as the operations officer for the F-22 Combined Test Force supported work that led to that aircraft’s initial operational capability. Dunlop’s more than 3,300 flight hours has to date been accumulated in fighter jets that include the F-22, F-15 and F-16.

She has combat time served in the F-15E, which she flew in support of Operation Provide Comfort. The operation, which began in April 1991, defended Kurds fleeing northern Iraq following the Persian Gulf War.

- AVweb.com/AVFlashnews

Pentagon: Weapons programs should continue, despite cost

Six weapon programs met five conditions required to keep them going under the Nunn-McCurdy law which requires detailed reviews once a program’s unit costs rise 50 percent above initial estimates, U.S. Defense Department told lawmakers.

The cost of the F-35 program, for instance, is now expected to reach $382 billion over the life of the program. The expected cost of each aircraft rose from $50 million in fiscal year 2002 dollars to $92.4 million. But senior defense officials said they expected to undercut those estimates.

The official questioned how much value the time-consuming and costly Nunn-McCurdy reviews truly added to the Pentagon’s oversight, noting that some cost increases reflected quantity changes and not management problems.

The Pentagon in April said the F-35 and five other programs had exceeded certain cost thresholds, prompting reviews that could, but were not expected to, lead to termination.

“We are certifying these six programs,” Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman told reporters on Wednesday after the department completed the reviews.

To allow continued funding, the Pentagon must certify that each program has no viable alternative; that new cost estimates are reasonable; that the program is vital to national security; that it rates a higher priority than other programs; and that it has an adequate management structure.

Defense officials told lawmakers in April that a restructuring of the F-35, or Joint Strike Fighter, would result in a sharp increase in unit costs, driving the overall program of the program to $328 billion. But new estimates indicate the cost will be even higher at $382 billion.

Other programs certified for continued work were:

* the DDG-1000 destroyer built by General Dynamics Corp, where the unit cost jumped by 86.5 percent due to the Navy’s decision to buy just three ships instead of the 10 planned.

* Boeing Co’s Apache Block III program to upgrade the AH-64 helicopter, which saw its unit costs increase by 25.5 percent due to the addition of 56 new aircraft to an existing program to upgrade 634 existing helicopters.

* a remote mine-hunting system for use on a new class of coastal warships, which saw its unit cost increase by 79.5 percent after the Navy decided to buy 54 fewer systems.

* Boeing’s Wideband Global Satellite (WGS) program, whose unit cost rose by 27.2 percent due to a production break of three years and a decision to buy two more satellites.

* a U.S. Army common missile warning program run by BAE Systems Plc, where unit costs nearly tripled after the Pentagon cut the quantity from 2,618 missiles to 208, spreading development costs over a much smaller overall number.

- reuters

American Airlines reduces summer fares

American Airlines has announced a series of discounts that will be welcomed by anyone considering a transatlantic jaunt this summer.

Flights to several major US cities are covered in the promotion, including return fares to east-coast destinations such as New York for just £334, and Los Angeles on the west-coast for £424.

Flights to Florida have also been discounted as part of the offer, with Orlando airfares available from as little as £448 return and flights to Miami even cheaper at £408 return.

The carrier’s main bases are at London Heathrow and Manchester airports, but it also offers connecting services from other UK airports, including Edinburgh, Glasgow, Aberdeen and Newcastle.

Bookings must be made by 25 June at the latest, and the periods of travel covered in the offer run between 1 June and 30 June, and between 22 August and 31 October.

Prices quoted on AA’s website include taxes and fees, and are valid for midweek travel from Monday to Thursday only. Travel from Friday to Sunday may be priced at a higher rate.

- news.cheapflights.co.uk

The F-16 Fighting Falcon

The F-16 Fighting Falcon is a compact, multi-role fighter aircraft. It is highly maneuverable and has proven itself in air-to-air combat and air-to-surface attack. It provides a relatively low-cost, high-performance weapon system for the United States and allied nations.

The first F16 took to the skies late in 1976, delivery to combat squadrons followed in January 1979. The Falcon was one of the first to use the now standard fly-by-wire control system whereby no direct mechanical link is provided, instead the pilot’s controls comunicate with F16 ‘s electronics which in turn move the aircraft’s flying surfaces

Little Boy Bomb signed by Morris Jeppson Model

Little Boy Bomb History:

On August 6, 1945, shortly after the Enola Gay rose from its runway on Tinian Island in the Pacific, Morris “Dick” Jeppson descended into the bomb bay to commerce arming our weapon nick-named “Little Boy”. It was the first atomic bomb to be used as a weapon. The weapon was developed by the Manhattan Project during World War II. It derived its explosive power from the nuclear fission of uranium 235. The Hiroshima bombing was the second artificial nuclear explosion in history, after the Trinity test, and the first uranium-based detonation.

To order the Little Boy Bomb signed by Morris Jeppson Model, you may call 1-800-579-1207 or visit http://www.warplanes.com

2010 Clearance Sale

Warplanes.com has extended New Year Clearance Sale. Up to 50% off while supplies last. Visit Warplanes.com to view products on SALE.

Call 1-800-579-1207 to place your orders and inquiries or email us at sales@warplanes.com

Pirates hijack tanker off Somali coast

Pirates off Somalia’s coast have hijacked a chemical tanker with a North Korean crew, European naval forces reported.

The MV Theresa VIII, owned by a Virgin Islands company and operated from Singapore, was seized in the Indian Ocean on Monday, according to a statement from the European Union Naval Force Somalia whose charge includes combating maritime piracy.

Theresa VIII, carrying a crew of 28 North Koreans, was heading for Mombasa, Kenya, but was hijacked in the South Somali Basin.

Somalia’s transitional government has been unable to stop pirates, many of whom are based in the country’s port cities. That has prompted Western countries to step up martime patrols.

Pirate attack off the coast of east Africa have significantly increasde this year, according to the International Maritime Bureau, which monitors shipping crimes. But seccessful aatacks have declined as a result of the strong presence of international monitors.

From January 1 till September 30 this year, pirates worldwide mounted 306 attacks, compared with 293 in all of 2008. More than half of this year’s attacks were carried out by suspected Somali pirates off the east coast of Somalia and in the Gulf of Aden, a major shopping route between Yemen and Somalia.

Visit Warplanes.com for more model ships, aircraft carriers and other vessels!

‘Tweeters’ to report Atlantis launch

Fingers will be flying when space shuttle Atlantis blasts off Monday. About 100 of NASA’s geekiest fans will be on hand, pecking away at iPhones, BlackBerrys, laptops and other Twittering gadgets.

They plan to let loose with electronic messages – provided they aren’t so swept away by the afternoon liftoff that they fall uncharacteristically silent for a moment or two.

NASA estimates the 100 have more than 150,000 Twitter followers. It’s a dream outreach program for a space agency looking to drm up support.

Astronauts have been tweeting from Earth and orbit since spring. While NASA already has held a few of the tweetups — so-called meet ups of people who use Twitter — it’s the first for Kennedy Space Center, a high-security area requiring government clearance.

Even the most staid NASA types see the benefit of reaching out to a younger, hipper crowd.

Visit Warplanes.com for more NASA model spacecrafts!

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