Community Corner
Flooding In HV Contributed To Record 28 Disasters Costing $92.9B
Torrential rains in the Hudson Valley in July caused one death and destroyed homes, roads, cars and bridges.

HUDSON VALLEY, NY — Flooding in the Hudson Valley contributed to a record 28 billion-dollar weather and climate disasters that collectively cost about $92.9 billion, government climatologists said Tuesday.
The unprecedented number of disasters occurred during a remarkably warm year wrapped up by a record-warm December, according to the report from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
Storms and flooding in the Hudson Valley in July were among the billion-dollar-plus disasters.
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Torrential rains in the Hudson Valley July 9-10 caused one death, destroyed homes, roads, cars and bridges and left major damage to the United States Military Academy.
Rainfall totals ranged from a little more than 1 inch in Hastings-on-Hudson and Bardonia to more than 8 inches in Shrub Oak and West Point.
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SEE ALSO:
- HV Flood Timeline July 9: People Trapped, Cars Flood, Roads Collapse
- Hudson Valley Flooded: Town-By-Town Rainfall Totals
- Woman Dies Trying To Evacuate Her Home During Flash Flood
- Torrential Rains Damage Freight, Passenger Train Tracks In The Hudson Valley
- Hudson Valley Flooded: 1 Dead, Trains & Roads Closed, More Rain Coming
Then five days later, the Hudson Valley received another 3 inches of precipitation. That was followed by a July 16 storm that dropped another 2 inches of rain to an already-soaked region.
The July storms weren’t the only major weather-maker in 2023 in the Hudson Valley. At the end of September, 7 inches of rain fell in the Hudson Valley, on Long Island and in New York City.
Overall, NOAA said, at least 492 people died in the 28 severe weather events, which collectively cost about $92.2 billion. They included:
- 17 severe weather/hail events
- 4 flooding events
- 2 tropical cyclones (Idalia in Florida and Typhoon Mawar in Guam)
- 2 tornado outbreaks
- 1 winter storm/cold wave event
- 1 wildfire event (Maui Island of Hawaii)
- 1 drought and heat wave event
NOAA Chief Scientist Sarah Kapnick said the most recent disasters point to a worrying pattern of weather extremes.
“For millions of Americans impacted by a seemingly endless onslaught of weather and climate disasters, 2023 has hit a new record for many extremes,” Kapnick said in a news release. “Record warm U.S. temperatures in December, a record-setting number of U.S. billion-dollar disasters in 2023 and potentially the warmest year on record for the planet are just the latest examples of the extremes we now face that will continue to worsen due to climate change.”
NOAA said the most costly disasters were the Southern/Midwestern drought and heat wave, with costs of $14.5 billion, and severe weather in the South and East that cost $6 billion in early March.
Since 1980, the United States has sustained 376 weather and climate disasters costing or exceeding $1 billion. Their cumulative cost exceeds $2.66 trillion, NOAA said.
Over the last seven years, at least 5,000 people have been killed in 137 separate billion-dollar disasters that collectively cost more than $1 trillion in damage.
This is also a record 13th consecutive year in which the United States has experienced 10 or more billion-dollar disasters and the fourth consecutive year (2020–2023) in which 18 or more billion-dollar disasters impacted the country.
Multiple records were shattered in 2023, according to NOAA.
On June 20 in Texas, Del Rio and Rio Grande both hit 113 degrees Fahrenheit, and San Angelo reported a high of 114 degrees, setting an all-time heat record at each location. Temperatures averaged 102.8 degrees for the month of July in Phoenix; Death Valley, California set records with daytime and nighttime temperatures of 128 degrees and 120 degrees, respectively on July 20; and Chicago broke the record for heat indices, with a feel-like temperature of 120 degrees on July 6.
2023 was also an above-average tornado year, with 1,197 reported and 97 possible tornadoes still under investigation. Significantly, Iowa had its first January tornadoes since 1967; California had its strongest tornado since 1983; and more than 110 tornadoes were reported across the Midwest on March 28, placing nearly 28 million people under watches and warnings.
The number of wildfires was near normal, with 55,500 reported for the year. The fires burned 2.6 million acres, well below the 10-year average of 7.1 million acres.
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