Thunderstorms Monday morning left Camden County with 1,000 emergency calls and intense flooding

Husband Omar Marquez is behind the wheel as Angie Colon gets help from her mother and daughter pushing their car after it stalled while driving through high water on Ferry Avenue near PATCO station, the White Horse Pike and Route 130 in Camden Monday, July 6, 2026, as a flash flood threat continues for the region. The family was trying to get home nearby from shopping.

Camden County and city officials are working with the state to assess the damage after severe thunderstorms left the region with heavy flooding Monday morning.

Mayor Victor Carstarphen said no fatalities or injuries have been reported, but by Monday afternoon, Camden City had received about 90 service calls reporting damages following more than 4 inches of rainfall, and he expected Camden to get more calls as people return home from work to potential flooding.

“Today, the rainfall exceeded what our stormwater system is designed to handle in such a short period of time,” Carstarphen said.

Countywide, Camden received about 1,000 911 calls just in the stretch of the morning storm, said Dan Keashen, Camden County’s public affairs director.

It will take a while for the county to determine how many homes were impacted and the estimated cost of damages. Public assistance teams from the state will work with the city and county to assess damages home by home in affected areas, said Morgan Callan, external communications manager for Camden County.

Dave Balog of Mullica Hill makes his way to his truck in the flooded parking lot at the Ferry Avenue PATCO station in Camden Monday, July 6, 2026, as a flash flood threat continues for the region. Balog said there were no warnings about a storm when he parked there four hours earlier for an appointment in Center City Philadelphia. His truck did start as it was not in the deepest area of the lot.

Flooding left vehicles stranded on roadways throughout the county, including two police vehicles and a fire department apparatus in Camden City, Keashen said. But most of the water has receded, according to a press release Monday afternoon.

Both city pools in Camden will be closed this week, Carstarphen said.

Camden City residents with damage to their properties can call the city emergency operations center at (856) 757-7132 or (856) 757-7139. Calling in those damages will allow city officials to report them to the state, which then could unlock regional and state disaster aid for residents.

Residents of other Camden County municipalities can report property damages to their respective offices of emergency management.

Carstarphen couldn’t confirm the timeline for how long it would take officials to visit properties to assess damages, but he said he encourages residents to file claims with their property insurance providers in the meantime.

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *