CRITICAL — May 20, 2026. Dangerous flash flooding in Forest Hills, Queens. Trains are down. Pedestrians wading through at least a foot of water just to cross the street. Multiple videos capture the scene at one of Queens’ most critical transit and traffic hubs.
The Flooding
“Dangerous levels of flash flooding in Forest Hills. Trains are down, had to wade through at least a foot of water to cross the street. We need to invest in our stormwater systems and build more blue-green infrastructure! This is our new normal.”
Why Forest Hills Matters for Long Island
Forest Hills sits at the intersection of Queens Boulevard and the Long Island Expressway — the most critical traffic interchange between Manhattan and Long Island. The Forest Hills LIRR station is a major stop on the Main Line.
When Forest Hills floods:
- Queens Boulevard — the “Boulevard of Death” — becomes impassable, cutting off the primary surface-street corridor from midtown Manhattan to the LIE
- The E/F/M/R subway lines run through Forest Hills — service suspensions here cascade across the entire Queens subway network
- The LIRR Forest Hills station may be affected — check MTA alerts
- The LIE entrance ramps at Queens Boulevard back up, compounding the I-495 flash flooding at 188th St that already closed all lanes
Forest Hills flooding + LIE flooding at 188th St = the entire western Queens transportation grid is broken tonight.
”This Is Our New Normal”
The poster’s call for investment in stormwater infrastructure echoes what experts have been saying for years. Forest Hills’ combined sewer system — shared stormwater and sewage pipes — was designed over a century ago for rainfall patterns that no longer apply. When 2+ inches of rain falls in 20 minutes, the system’s capacity is exceeded almost immediately.
Blue-green infrastructure — rain gardens, bioswales, permeable pavement, green roofs — absorbs and slows stormwater before it enters the pipe system. NYC has invested in some of these projects, but not at the scale needed to prevent scenes like tonight’s.
The question isn’t whether this will happen again. It’s when. And whether the infrastructure will be ready.
Tonight’s Full Coverage
- LIVE Storm Damage Roundup — 17+ Incidents
- Car Submerged on Jackie Robinson Parkway
- Homes Flooding at Merrick/Liberty Ave — No Emergency Alerts
- LIE All Lanes Closed — Flash Flooding at 188th St
- Three Sinkholes in Six Days — LI Geology
Were You Injured?
If you or someone you know was injured in tonight’s storm — whether in a car accident caused by flooding, a slip and fall from downed debris, or property damage from infrastructure failure — you may have a legal claim. Under New York law, claims against a city or county for inadequate emergency response or infrastructure failure must be filed within 90 days under General Municipal Law §50-e. The Law Office of Jason Tenenbaum, P.C. offers free consultations for Long Island and NYC accident victims.
📞 (516) 750-0595 — Available 24/7