Ida remnants deluge Northeast dealerships after blasting Louisiana

Mere days after striking the Gulf Coast, Hurricane Ida’s remnants on Wednesday inundated parts of New York and New Jersey, including auto dealerships, with several inches of rain.

The post-tropical cyclone’s rapid deluge was so severe that the National Weather Service in New York issued its first-ever flash flood emergency for New York City and its first-ever for northeast New Jersey.

Areas of New Jersey that don’t typically see extensive flooding were overwhelmed. In some instances, dealers moved cars out of low-lying spots, but it was futile.

“In some cases, even the locations dealers were moving cars to which [were] presumed to be high and dry were neither high enough nor dry enough to prevent a loss,” New Jersey Coalition of Automotive Retailers President Jim Appleton told Automotive News.

Appleton, who spent Thursday talking to dealers, estimated at least 10 to 15 dealerships in the state would experience significant losses. One dealer told Appleton he lost up to 150 cars.

Those losses don’t bode well for dealers who were already struggling with low inventory levels, Appleton said.

“I had a dealer with a Ford store who told me all of his F-150s were underwater … those vehicles are all off the market,” he said.

Paula Frendel, executive director of the New Jersey Independent Automobile Dealers Association, said she heard mixed reports. Some dealers escaped with no damage to their stores. Others reported vehicles with water up to their doors, she said in a text.

And in the boroughs of New York City, streets and subway systems became like rivers and waterfalls, according to a bevy of images posted on social media. The Weather Service reported a record-breaking 3.15 inches of rain fell in one hour in Central Park.

“Queens has been hit very, very hard,” said Mark Schienberg, president of the Greater New York Automobile Dealers Association. “We haven’t heard anything yet, but we will, I’m sure, in the next couple of hours as we get reports back in.”

The historic rainfall led the governors of New York and New Jersey to declare states of emergency. The remnants dropped 6 to 8 inches of rain across the Northeast and even spawned tornadoes in New Jersey and Maryland, according to the Weather Service.

The remnants caused the deaths of at least 12 people in New York City and 14 in New Jersey, according to local news reports.

Soil in the region was already saturated because of Hurricane Henri, which made landfall in Rhode Island as a tropical storm just over a week ago.

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