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Emergency Declaration in Lyon County After Levee Breaks

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Kennedy
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« on: January 05, 2008, 11:31:10 am »

Earlier there were two quakes there as well 
 
MAP 4.0  2008/01/05 12:03:36 39.905 -118.351 16.0 32 km ( 20 mi) SSE of Lovelock, NV
MAP 4.2  2008/01/05 11:54:25 39.483 -117.933 16.0 26 km ( 16 mi) SSE of Dixie Valley, NV
MAP 3.8  2008/01/05 10:42:35 39.543 -117.647 16.0 19 km ( 12 mi) W of Petersons Mill, NV



Emergency Declaration in Lyon County After Levee Breaks

TCID President Ernie Schank says during a live phone interview that a gopher hole cave-in may be the cause behind the levee break.

He also says yesterday's heavy rain did not weaken it and that they were "prepared for the storm." Maintenance crews had been watching the canal all night.

-----

A countywide emergency declaration has been made for Lyon County after the Truckee Canal levee broke early Saturday morning in the eastern Fernley Farm District Road area.

Crews are rescuing nearly 4,000 people right now off roof tops with helicopters and are using boats.

At least 200 homes are currently under three feet of water. Flooding is expected to continue around Farm District and Ricci Roads. The Lyon County Sheriff's Office says flooding has expanded to Shadow Mountain Drive and Cottonwood Lane.

Evacuees can go to Fernley High School.

Fernley Mayor Todd Cutler told Channel 2 during a live 8am update that the electricity is out, and that there's been no injuries "to my knowledge." 

Reporter Jen Jackson mentioned she saw several agencies including the Nevada Highway Patrol, Washoe County Sheriff's Office, NAS Fallon and the Reno Fire Department helping getting people out.

--

BULLETIN - EAS ACTIVATION REQUESTED
FLASH FLOOD WARNING
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE RENO NV
750 AM PST SAT JAN 5 2008

THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN RENO HAS EXTENDED THE

* FLASH FLOOD WARNING FOR...
NORTH CENTRAL LYON COUNTY IN WESTERN NEVADA...

* UNTIL 1015 AM PST

* AT 740 AM PST...LOCAL LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICIALS CONTINUED TO
REPORT FLASH FLOODING FROM A BROKEN LEVEE OVER THE WARNED AREA.

* LOCATIONS IN THE WARNING INCLUDE BUT ARE NOT LIMITED TO FERNLEY

FLOOD WATER FROM A BROKEN LEVEE ALONG THE TRUCKEE CANAL WILL
CONTINUE TO CAUSE FLOODING OF THE AREA AROUND FARM DISTRICT ROAD AND
RICCI ROAD IN FERNLEY. LYON COUNTY SHERIFFS OFFICE HAS REPORTED THAT
THE FLOODING HAS EXPANDED TO SHADOW MOUNTAIN DRIVE AND COTTONWOOD
LANE. ADDITIONALLY...COUNTRY ROADS AND FARMLANDS ALONG THE BANKS OF
THE TRUCKEE CANAL AND OTHER LOW LYING AREAS ARE SUBJECT TO FLOODING.

DO NOT DRIVE YOUR VEHICLE INTO AREAS WHERE THE WATER COVERS THE
ROADWAY. THE WATER DEPTH MAY BE TOO GREAT TO ALLOW YOUR CAR TO CROSS
SAFELY. MOVE TO HIGHER GROUND.

A FLASH FLOOD WARNING MEANS THAT FLOODING IS OCCURRING. IF YOU ARE
IN THE WARNING AREA MOVE TO HIGHER GROUND IMMEDIATELY. RESIDENTS
LIVING ALONG THE TRUCKEE CANAL AND NEARBY STREAMS AND CREEKS SHOULD
TAKE IMMEDIATE PRECAUTIONS TO PROTECT LIFE AND PROPERTY. DO NOT
ATTEMPT TO CROSS SWIFTLY FLOWING WATERS OR WATERS OF UNKNOWN DEPTH
BY FOOT OR BY AUTOMOBILE.

http://ktvn.com/Global/story.asp?S=7581607
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wayne5
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« Reply #1 on: January 05, 2008, 01:13:13 pm »

Climate change is going to do a number on our rotting infrastructure. Hope everyone gets out ok.
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« Reply #2 on: January 05, 2008, 03:56:41 pm »

 

I'm kinda hoping to go here and help out.
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Kennedy
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« Reply #3 on: January 05, 2008, 08:22:37 pm »

Levee breaks as storms pummel West Coast

A ruptured levee sent a frigid "wall of water" from a rain-swollen canal into this high desert town early Saturday, flooding hundreds of homes and forcing the rescue of dozens of people by helicopter and boat.

To the west, a dangerous layer of heavy snow covered the Northern California mountains as rain and wind from the third storm in as many days hit the West Coast. The storms have been blamed for at least three deaths, and hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses in California, Oregon and Washington were without power Saturday.

No injuries were reported in the flood in Fernley, about 30 miles east of Reno, after a section of the Truckee Canal up to 150 feet long broke soon after 4 a.m.

As many as 3,500 people were temporarily stranded and an estimated 1,500 ended up being displaced from their homes, Huntley said Saturday night. About 25 people remained at a shelter set up at a high school after a peak of about 150 earlier in the day.

Eric Cornett estimated the water was about 2 feet deep and rising fast when drove away from his home with his wife and three children.

"We saw water coming in the back door and tried to grab as much stuff as possible to save it. The water was rising very quickly and it was scary. The water was freezing. I couldn't even feel my feet," he said.

Lyon County Fire Chief Scott Huntley, one of the first on the scene, described it as a "wall of water about two feet high going down Farm District Road."

"In some places folks had to deal with 8 feet of water," he said. "Firefighters were in chest-deep water making rescues."

Two helicopters aided rescue crews in pontoons in rescuing at least 18 people. Local residents in fishing boats rescued many more.

"Some folks were standing in their driveways and some were on top of their buildings," said Zip Upham, a spokesman for the Navy training facility.

By afternoon, the Truckee River water flowing into the canal was diverted upstream, said Ernie Schank, president of the Truckee-Carson Irrigation District. As the water receded, Fernley Mayor Todd Cutler said he had reports of damage to at least 300 to 400 homes.

One official suggested burrowing rodents might have contributed to the break in the levee along with the heavy rains, but the cause wasn't clear.

"We have to look at the weather as the culprit right now, but we are not sure of that," Huntley said.

The National Weather Service recorded 1.91 inches of rain at Reno-Tahoe International Airport on Friday, a record. Reno averages only 8 inches of rainfall annually and Fernley only about 5 inches.

Gov. Jim Gibbons, who visited the shelter and toured the area by helicopter on Saturday, declared the county an emergency area. Federal Emergency Management Agency planned to conduct a damage assessment on Monday.

Avalanche warnings were posted for the backcountry of the central Sierra Nevada and flash flood warnings were in effect for many areas of Southern California, where large swaths of hillsides had been denuded by the fall's wildfires.

Remote sensors and ski areas in the high Sierra Nevada had recorded up to 5 feet since Friday morning, and the west side of the Lake Tahoe Basin already had 4 to 5 feet by Friday night, the National Weather Service office in Reno, Nev., said Saturday.

As much as 9 feet of snow was possible in the Sierra by Sunday.

An 80-mile stretch of U.S. Interstate 80 from Reno to Applegate, Calif., was closed Saturday night as the fresh wave of snow moved in.

The weather also was blamed for a 17-car pileup that closed the westbound lanes of I-80 near Patrick just east of the Reno-Sparks area Saturday afternoon.

The National Weather Service recorded wind gusts up to 165 mph on mountaintops northwest of Lake Tahoe on Friday.

"If you take the wind gusts, the snowfall and all of it together, it's definitely one of the biggest storms we've experienced in a number of years," said weather service meteorologist Scott McGuire.

Oregon Gov. Ted Kulongoski declared a state of emergency for Umatilla County because of wind damage.

More than 450,000 homes and businesses from the Bay Area to the Central Valley were in the dark Saturday, down from more than 1.6 million the day before. It could be days before all the lights are back on, Pacific Gas & Electric officials said.

East of Los Angeles, a 25-year-old woman died after her pickup truck was swept into a flood channel. Rescuers found her 36-year-old boyfriend clinging to a tree.

Authorities said the couple unwittingly drove onto a flooded road in Chino because someone removed a barricade.

The storm also was blamed for the death of a woman killed by a falling tree in Oregon, and a falling branch killed a transportation worker in Northern California on Friday.

In the south, residents of Orange County canyons that were stripped by wildfires last fall — making them susceptible to mudslides — had been told to leave their homes by Friday evening. However, there was no indication how many obeyed, and mandatory evacuation orders were later lifted.

In one of the four canyons, Modjeska, thick mud coated roads Saturday as Gene Corona, 72, wore hip boots and a raincoat as he used a shovel to repair erosion in a channel he had dug to carry water away from his home.

"I made the rounds last night, every hour on the hour, whenever stuff started breaking through," he said. "I saved my house. It's my home, and insurance doesn't cover mudslides."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080106/ap_on_re_us/winter_storm
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The world moves for love; it kneels before it in awe.....
Edward Walker "The Village"
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