CRITICAL — May 20, 2026. Water is inside people’s homes at Merrick Avenue and Liberty Avenue in Queens. FDNY is rushing to respond. Debris is everywhere. And not a single emergency alert was sent to anyone’s phone.
The Scene

@Mikeyup10 posted what may be the most damning account of the night:
“New Yorkers are underwater in their homes. No flash flood warnings from the @NYCMayor. How many people just died? FDNY is rushing around. Debris everywhere. Merrick Ave and Liberty Ave was a raging river an hour ago. Not a SINGLE emergency alert to anyone’s phone.”
The post identifies a fundamental failure: no Wireless Emergency Alert (WEA) was pushed to cell phones in the affected area. No NotifyNYC push notification. No sirens. Residents had no warning that a wall of water was coming.
Video: 169th Street Station in Jamaica — Floods “Like a River”
@PassengersUnited captured the scene leaving the 169th Street station in Jamaica before heading upstairs to find the streets flooded like a river just to reach the Q82 bus. The same rider also reported Hillside Ave flooded from 168th to the Clearview Expressway, and Hempstead Ave in Queens Village as the worst flooding they’ve ever seen.
This is the LIRR Jamaica hub — the transfer point for nearly every Long Island Rail Road branch. If the streets around Jamaica station are a river, getting to and from the station is dangerous on foot.
Why This Matters for Long Island
Merrick Avenue in Queens runs directly to the Nassau County border. It becomes Merrick Boulevard, then feeds into the communities of Elmont, Valley Stream, and Rosedale — the western gateway to Long Island.
When Merrick Avenue floods in Queens, the water doesn’t stop at the borough line. The same drainage systems, the same topography, and the same storm cell cross into Nassau County. If homes are flooding at Merrick and Liberty in Queens, residents in Elmont, Valley Stream, South Ozone Park, and Rosedale should be on high alert.
The Emergency Alert Failure
New York City has multiple systems designed to warn residents of life-threatening weather:
| System | Purpose | Was It Used Tonight? |
|---|---|---|
| Wireless Emergency Alert (WEA) | Pushes alerts directly to cell phones in affected areas via cell towers | ❌ NO |
| NotifyNYC | City’s own push notification system (app + SMS) | ⚠️ Sent a Severe Thunderstorm Warning at 6:28 PM — but NO flash flood warning later |
| NOAA Weather Radio | Automated NWS alerts on dedicated radio frequency | ✅ NWS issued warnings |
| TV/Radio EAS | Emergency Alert System broadcast interruptions | ✅ Standard broadcast |
| 311 / NYC.gov | City website severe weather page | ❌ Showed “No weather updates at this time” as of 8 PM |
The NWS issued a Severe Thunderstorm Warning at 6:28 PM for Brooklyn, Manhattan, and Staten Island. But when the actual flash flooding hit Queens — water entering homes, roads becoming rivers, cars submerging — no escalated flash flood emergency alert was sent to phones.
During Hurricane Ida’s remnants in September 2021, the same failure occurred. Eleven people drowned in basement apartments in Queens and Brooklyn. After Ida, the city pledged to improve its alert systems. Tonight suggests those improvements were insufficient.
What Residents Should Know
- If you are in a basement apartment and water is entering: Get to higher ground immediately. Do not try to save belongings. Basement flooding killed 11 people during Ida.
- If water has entered your home: Document the damage with photos/video before cleanup. Contact your insurance company. File a claim with FEMA if a federal disaster declaration is made.
- If you had property damage from tonight’s storm: You may have a legal claim if the damage resulted from municipal infrastructure failure (sewer backup, storm drain failure, inadequate drainage). The 90-day Notice of Claim deadline under GML §50-e applies to claims against the city.
- Report flooding to 311 and to the NYC Department of Environmental Protection.
Full Storm Coverage
- LIVE Storm Damage Roundup — 17+ incidents tracked tonight
- Car Submerged on Jackie Robinson Parkway
- Dr. Dao: Three Sinkholes in Six Days — LI Geology
- Queens Flooding — Flushing Avenue
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. Experienced Long Island injury attorneys offers free consultations for Long Island and NYC accident victims.
📞 (516) 750-0595 — Available 24/7