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Vermont Braces for Damaging Floods

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MONTPELIER, Vt. — Powerful storms are expected to cause dangerous flash flooding overnight Sunday and into Monday.
 
While Central Vermont in particular could experience catastrophic flooding, the entire state and the Western Massachusetts are in danger of flooding and washouts.
 
Gov. Phil Scott declared a state of emergency Sunday afternoon and the state's emergency operations system has been activated because of the "likelihood of widespread damage and posing a threat to property and public safety in Vermont."
 
Scott also authorized activation of the National Guard and the utilization of other state agencies.
Three to 5 inches of rain is expected to fall over already saturated ground, the result of nearly nonstop storms for the past month. Water undermined Route 4 in Killington on Saturday and parts of New York's Hudson Valley, including West Point where a reported 10 inches of rain fell, had significant flooding on Sunday. 
 
According to the National Weather Service, excessive runoff can result in flooding of rivers, creeks, streams, and other low-lying and flood-prone locations. Areas that experienced heavy rain last week are especially vulnerable.
 
Motorists are being reminded not to drive through flooded roadways and check current road conditions before venturing out. More than 50 percent of all flash flooding deaths occur within vehicles. 
 
Flash flooding threats could become extremely dangerous throughout parts of Vermont and the Champlain Valley bordering New York State. Mud slides in some regions can't be ruled out. 
 
The storm system is expected to depart the region Wednesday. 
 
A flood warning is in effect in the Berkshires through 2 p.m. Tuesday; a flood watch is in effect for Bennington County through 5:30 a.m. Monday. 

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Healey, Driscoll Talk Transportation Funding, Municipal Empowerment

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff

The governor talks about a transportation bond bill filed Friday and its benefits for cities and towns.
BOSTON — Gov. Maura Healey and Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll were greeted with applause by municipal leaders on Friday as they touted $8 billion in transportation funding over the next decade and an additional $100 million in Chapter 90 road funds. 
 
Those were just a few of the initiatives to aid cities and towns, they said, and were based what they were hearing from local government
 
"We also proposed what, $2 1/2 billion the other day in higher education through investment in campuses across 29 communities statewide," the governor said. 
 
"Really excited about that and with those projects, by the way, as you're talking to people, you can remind them that that's 140,000 construction jobs in your communities."
 
The governor and Driscoll were speaking to the annual Massachusetts Municipal Association's conference. Branded as Connect 351, the gathering of appointed and elected municipal leaders heard from speakers, spoke with vendors in the trade show, attended workshops and held their annual business meeting this year at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center.
 
Healey and Driscoll followed a keynote address by Suneel Gupta, author, entrepreneur and host of television series "Business Class," on reducing stress and boosting energy, and welcomes from MMA Executive Director Adam Chapdelaine, outgoing MMA President and Waltham councilor John McLaughlin, and from Boston Mayor Michelle Wu via her chief of staff Tiffany Chu.
 
"We know that local communities are really the foundation of civic life, of democracy. We invented that here in Massachusetts, many, many years ago, and that continues to this day," said Healey. "It's something that we're proud of. We respect, and as state leaders, we respect the prerogative, the leadership, the economy, the responsibility of our local governments and those who lead them, so you'll always have champions in us."
 
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