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Northeast braces for more rain as Hurricane Lee approaches

The region is already dealing with catastrophic flash flooding and damage from heavy rains earlier in the week.
Northeast braces for more rain as Hurricane Lee approaches
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Parts of New England are bracing for more dangerous flooding as heavy rains continue and Hurricane Lee starts to threaten on the coast.

The rain has already caused sinkholes and catastrophic flash flooding, after 10 inches of precipitation fell in 6 hours in some places. Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey declared a state of emergency Tuesday night after the event.

Parts of Massachusetts and Rhode Island were under flash flood warnings as the rain resumed on Wednesday.

Dean Mazzarella, Mayor of Leominster, Massachusetts, said the downtown had mostly flooded and some buildings had collapsed.

Meanwhile, Hurricane Lee is moving northward in the Atlantic Ocean, and is expected to bring storm surge threats to coastal areas in the Northeast as it draws closer.

According to the National Hurricane Center forecast, it's possible the storm may make landfall as a hurricane on Maine's eastern coast.

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"Hurricane conditions, heavy rainfall, and coastal flooding are possible in portions of eastern Maine on Saturday, and a Hurricane Watch has been issued for that area," the National Hurricane Center wrote on Wednesday.

A tropical storm watch was in effect for Watch Hill, Rhode Island, to Stonington, Maine; Block Island, Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket.

A storm surge watch was in effect for Cape Cod Bay and Nantucket.

The last hurricane to have a significant effect on Maine was Hurricane Bob in 1991. It was responsible for three deaths and caused more than $5 million in damage.


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