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Tag: Flooding

  • Atmospheric river brings flooding, power outages to West Coast

    Atmospheric river brings flooding, power outages to West Coast

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    A powerful winter storm brought on by an atmospheric river hit parts of the West Coast on Tuesday, including portions of Northern California, Oregon and Washington state, causing blustery winds, dumping several inches of rain and bringing flooding to some areas.

    As of Tuesday evening, more than 190,000 homes and businesses in the Pacific Northwest were without power, according to PowerOutage.us.

    The storm was caused by an atmospheric river – a weather system made up of a long narrow channel that carries water vapor.

    Record high tide of 18.4 feet submerged parts of the Washington state capital of Olympia, and swept marine life into the city’s streets, officials said.

    “Jellyfish washed over the shoreline and into our streets,” said Olympia Water Resources Director Eric Christensen. “There was a woman who was kind enough to rescue them and put them back into Budd Inlet.”

    Other areas around Puget Sound — including parts of Seattle and the northwest corner of the state — also saw flooding, which trapped cars and impacted buildings.

    Coastal flooding and high wind advisories were in effect for much of western Washington state.

    CBS affiliate KOIN-TV reported that several freeways in the Portland area were closed Tuesday night due to flooding, downed trees and high winds.

    The weather conditions forced the full or partial closure of several Oregon state parks at a time when whale watchers and holiday tourists typically flock to the coast.

    Thirty-foot waves were expected to break along the entire Oregon coast, the National Weather Service said, with wave heights possibly topping 40 feet on the north coast.

    Heavy rainfall in Northern California’s Bay Area on Tuesday morning caused flooding on freeways and created a traffic nightmare for morning rush hour commuters, with 60 freeway collisions reported to California Highway Patrol by 8:30 a.m. local time, according to CBS San Francisco.

    Mount Tamalpais State Park in Marin County had recorded a staggering 4.1 inches of rain by 6 a.m., CBS San Francisco reported. The powerful winds and rain downed trees and caused power outages to several thousand customers.

    Rainstorm in California
    Golden Gate Bridge is seen as rainstorm hits San Francisco on Dec. 27, 2022.

    Tayfun CoÃ…kun/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images


    The National Weather Service predicted that a second storm front is expected to hit the West Coast from Central California up to the Pacific Northwest on Thursday and bring another round of heavy rain and snow.

    The Weather Channel meteorologist Chris Warren said that the Pacific Northwest could see mudslides and landslides in the coming days, along with several feet of snow.

    “In many areas, snow will be measured in feet, five to six feet,” Warren said.

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  • Hurricane Nicole Makes Landfall In Florida—Here’s Where It’s Headed

    Hurricane Nicole Makes Landfall In Florida—Here’s Where It’s Headed

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    Topline

    Hurricane Nicole made landfall on Florida’s east coast early Thursday morning as a Category 1 storm, according to the National Hurricane Center—though it was quickly downgraded back to a tropical storm an hour later—bringing sustained wind, rain and power outages to Florida as the state still continues to recover from Hurricane Ian.

    Key Facts

    Nicole made landfall on Florida’s North Hutchinson Island, south of Vero Beach, with estimated maximum sustained winds of 75 miles per hour, the NHC reported at 3:00 a.m. Eastern time Thursday.

    The NHC then updated at 4:00 a.m. to say Nicole was now a tropical storm, with maximum sustained winds of 70 miles per hour.

    The storm is expected to move through central Florida Thursday toward the Gulf of Mexico, and will then move across the Florida Panhandle and Georgia Thursday night into Friday, the NHC reported as of 4:00 a.m.

    The storm is expected to continue to weaken as it moves inland, and central and northern Florida are expected to receive three to five inches of rain (maximum eight inches), while some parts of the Florida coast could receive up to five feet of storm surge and tornadoes are possible in parts of the state through early Thursday morning.

    Flooding had already been reported in Florida last night ahead of Nicole’s arrival, according to local news reports, and some areas were under mandatory and voluntary evacuation orders ahead of the storm, along with some buildings that had already suffered structural damage from Hurricane Ian.

    More than 40 Florida counties are under a state of emergency, after Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) issued an emergency declaration earlier this week and then amended it Wednesday to include an additional 11 counties.

    Big Number

    63,619. That’s the number of customers in Florida without power as of 3:50 a.m. Eastern time, according to PowerOutage.us.

    What To Watch For

    Americans in more northern states will also see rainfall from Nicole as the storm moves inland and weakens, with the NHC projecting the southeast, southern Appalachians and western mid-Atlantic region will receive two to four inches of rain through Saturday, including eastern parts of Tennessee, Kentucky and Ohio. Northern mid-Atlantic states and New England will receive one to four inches of rain.

    Surprising Fact

    Nicole is the first hurricane to make landfall in the U.S. in November since Hurricane Kate in 1985, CNN notes.

    Tangent

    The mandatory evacuation orders for Hurricane Nicole include former President Donald Trump’s Mar-A-Lago club in Palm Beach County—which is already currently closed to guests—but the Washington Post reports the ex-president did not plan to evacuate.

    Key Background

    Hurricane Nicole arrives in Florida weeks after the state was already battered by Hurricane Ian, which made landfall in late September. The storm ranks as one of the state’s deadliest recent storms, killing more than 100 people, and caused an estimated $67 billion in damage, making it the second costliest storm next to Hurricane Katrina.

    Further Reading

    Late-Season Storm Nicole Becomes A Hurricane Just Ahead Of Florida Landfall (Forbes)

    County-by-county: Expected impacts of Hurricane Nicole (Fox 35)

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    Alison Durkee, Forbes Staff

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  • At least 22 dead after landslide sweeps through Venezuela town

    At least 22 dead after landslide sweeps through Venezuela town

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    A landslide fueled by flooding and days of torrential rain swept through a town in central Venezuela, leaving at least 22 people dead as it dragged mud, rocks and trees through neighborhoods, authorities said Sunday. Dozens of people are missing.

    Residents of Las Tejerías in Santos Michelena, an agro-industrial town in Aragua state 54 miles (87 kilometers) southwest of Caracas, had just seconds to reach safety late Saturday as debris swept down a mountainside onto them.

    The official death toll rose to 22 after the recovery of 20 bodies on Sunday, Vice President Delcy Rodríguez told state-owned Venezolana de Televisión.

    “There was a large landslide in the central area of Las Tejerías” where five streams overflowed, she said from the scene of the disaster. “We have already found 22 dead people; there are more than 52 missing.”

    “There are still people walled in,” Rodríguez said. “We are trying to rescue them, to rescue them alive.”

    She said shelters will be set up for people who lost their homes.

    APTOPIX Venezuela Floods
    Residents walk through the debris left by flooding caused by a river that overflowed after days of intense rain in Las Tejerias, Venezuela, Sunday, Oct. 9, 2022.

    Matias Delacroix / AP


    Higher on the mountainside, most of the houses were swept away, including those of a group of Evangelicals who were praying when the landslide hit, said homemaker Carmen Teresa Chirinos, a resident of Las Tejerías. Families in tears hugged in front of destroyed homes and businesses.

    “There are a lot of people missing,” Chirinos said.

    Hours earlier, Major Gen. Carlos Pérez Ampueda, the vice minister for risk management and civil protection, had said via Twitter that several people were reported missing in the El Béisbol and La Agotada neighborhoods in the north of the town. Dozens of homes were damaged by the landslide.

    Rescuers were carrying out search operations with trained dogs and drones, Pérez Ampueda said. Crews of workers and heavy machinery removed debris to clear roads and restore electricity and water services.

    APTOPIX Venezuela Floods
    Men drag a live pig they found stuck in mud after flooding caused by intense rains in Las Tejerias, Venezuela, Sunday, Oct. 9, 2022. At least 22 people died after intense rain overflowed a ravine causing flash floods, Vice President Delcy Rodríguez said.

    Matias Delacroix / AP


    “So many families lost their houses and I, as a businessman, lost my pizzeria,” said Luis Fuentes, who opened his pizza restaurant two years ago. “Look, I have nothing.”

    Aragua Gov. Karina Carpio said the flood waters “terribly affected” 21 sectors in Las Tejerías, capital of the Santos Michelena municipality, which has some 54,000 inhabitants.

    During the past week, torrential rains have caused flooding in 11 of Venezuela’s 23 states.

    President Nicolás Maduro said 20.000 officials, including rescuers and members of security forces, have been deployed to affected regions.

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  • Tropical Storm Julia could hit Nicaragua and Colombian islands as hurricane

    Tropical Storm Julia could hit Nicaragua and Colombian islands as hurricane

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    Tropical Storm Julia formed Friday in the Caribbean Sea, triggering hurricane watches and warnings for Nicaragua and Colombian islands. Several Central American countries could also see heavy rainfall and flooding by Monday.

    Julia had maximum sustained winds of 45 mph and was moving west at 17 mph as of late Friday night, according to the U.S. National Hurricane Center (NHC).

    Julia is “expected to become a hurricane” by the time its eye passes near or over Colombia’s Providencia and San Andres islands on Saturday night, and reaches the Nicaraguan coast Sunday morning, the NHC said.

    It’s expected to weaken as it moves over inland Nicaragua Sunday, and then likely dissipate Monday, the NHC said, as its remnants move northwest over Central America.

    However, Julia is expected to bring heavy rainfall to several Central American countries, with the risk of “life-threatening flash floods and mudslides.”

    Eastern Nicaragua could see anywhere from 5 to 15 inches of rain, according to the NHC, while San Andres and Providencia could get 6 to 12 inches. Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala, Costa Rica, Panama and Belize are also expected to receive significant rainfall ranging anywhere from 3 to 12 inches.

    The storm was about 360 miles east of Providencia Island late Friday night, the NHC said.

    Nicaragua’s government issued a hurricane watch from Bluefields to the Nicaragua-Honduras border.

    Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro said via Twitter Friday that the government was preparing shelters on the islands. San Andres authorities announced a curfew on residents beginning Saturday at 6 a.m. to limit people in the streets. Yolanda González, director of Colombia’s Hydrology, Meteorology and Environmental Studies Institute said Julia could be a Category 1 hurricane when it passes the islands late Saturday.

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  • Kentucky residents still waiting for help months after devastating flooding

    Kentucky residents still waiting for help months after devastating flooding

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    Whitesburg, Kentucky — As Florida begins its long recovery from Hurricane Ian, Kentucky residents understand what the state is going through. More than two months ago, heavy rains resulted in Kentucky’s worst flooding disaster in decades — and many communities are still waiting for help, prompting calls for more action at the federal level. 

    The storm caused 40 deaths and hundreds of millions of dollars in damage — and the signs of lives upended are everywhere. Third-generation coal miner Roger Hatton is still sifting through debris and memories after the flooding destroyed his home. 

    “We have got a porch to sit on. Some people don’t got a porch to sit on,” Hatton said. “Some people are living in tents.”

    One of the most enduring images of the Kentucky floods is of 17-year-old Chloe Adams clinging to her dog, Sandy, on a neighbor’s rooftop for five hours. 

    “I didn’t know how to deal with that situation. I didn’t know what was going to happen and I really did think I was not going to make it out alive,” said Adams, whose cousin later rescued them on a kayak. 

    She still has not returned to her hometown of Whitesburg. 

    “I don’t think I would ever be able to comfortably sleep there again,” she said. 

    A nonprofit kitchen is providing the displaced an average of 1,200 meals a day. The start of the school year was delayed after five of the school district’s eight campuses were damaged. The state has also been rolling out some temporary homes. 

    “I believe that people should pull themselves up by their bootstraps. But their bootstraps have washed down the creek,” said state Rep. Angie Hatton, who lives in Whitesburg. 

    She said the problem for many now is navigating the process of securing aid from the Federal Emergency Management Agency. 

    “It takes some sort of Olympic athlete to jump through the hoops,” she said. “So I keep calling on our representatives in Congress and the U.S. Senate to please do something about FEMA.”

    Overall, FEMA has doled out more than $70 million to help with the recovery — but victims like Vanessa Rouse, a single mother of two, are stuck in limbo. 

    Rouse says her flood insurance and homeowners insurance are at odds over who should cover the damage. For now, she’s paying a mortgage on a house she can’t live in. 

    “I used to come here almost every day, but I don’t come that often anymore,” she said of her home. “Because it’s so sad. Because every day it’s more and more apparent of the loss.”

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  • As Floridians recover from Ian, most homeowners in the state do so without flood insurance

    As Floridians recover from Ian, most homeowners in the state do so without flood insurance

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    Many Florida homeowners starting the arduous recovery from Hurricane Ian will do so without the benefit of flood insurance, forcing them to either rebuild with scant resources or make hard choices about relocating.

    Ian was among the most destructive storms to hit the U.S. Early estimates of residential and commercial losses range from $28 billion to $47 billion, according to property-data company CoreLogic, while other projections have put the toll at more than $60 billio. The storm’s powerful eye wall was unusually large, measuring 40 miles across, while its storm surge peaked at 12 feet.

    “Since Andrew, Ian is looking most likely to be the largest loss Florida has experienced,” David Smith, senior leader of science and analytics at CoreLogic, said in a recent presentation.

    Hurricane Andrew struck in 1992 and was the costliest hurricane in U.S. history until Katrina, in 2005, which demolished the Louisiana coast and the city of New Orleans. 

    Since 1992, Florida’s population has grown more than 60%, exposing more residents to risk. Yet less than 1 in 5 of the state’s 10 million homes has flood insurance, according to the Insurance Information Institute. Without insurance, people in flooded areas must appeal to the Federal Emergency Management Administration for direct grants, which often top out at $30,000 or $35,000 — a fraction of what they may need to rebuild or move.

    The median home in Florida sells for $395,000, according to Redfin. Meanwhile, just one inch of flooding can cause $25,000 in damage, according to the National Flood Insurance Program. 


    Hurricane Ian leaves path of devastation in southwestern Florida

    08:13

    Although flooding is the most common natural disaster in America, most homeowners lack flood coverage, with poorer people less likely to have insurance. The typical flood insurance policy runs around $700 a year, while the average claims payout tops $50,000, according to the most recent data from FEMA.

    “Flood insurance is not equally distributed  in risky areas — homeowners who are more wealthy and in Whiter areas are more likely to have coverage,” said Max Besbris, assistant professor of sociology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and coauthor of a recent book on the aftermath of Hurricane Harvey. 

    “Communication failure”

    Nationwide, surveys show that between a quarter and a third of Americans carry flood insurance. Those without a policy usually do so because they can’t afford it or are unaware they need it. When Besbris and fellow sociologist Anna Rhodes interviewed victims of flooding from Harvey, they found that “most people did not know their level of vulnerability,” Besbris told CBS MoneyWatch. 

    “They did not think that floodwaters could rise as high as they had. The last storm they had was Imelda in 1979 — that was the benchmark that people were working with,” Besbris told CBS MoneyWatch. 

    “This is a communication failure on the part of FEMA, local municipalities and governments, to actually tell their residents that there is an increasing risk of flooding, especially as climate change makes flooding more severe.” 

    Unlike car insurance, which is required by law, flood insurance is optional for most homeowners, unless they live in a FEMA-designated flood zone. But with climate change making flooding more frequent and more severe, those zones are outdated in many parts of the country. 

    Today, about 180,000 homes on Florida’s storm-battered Gulf Coast face a significant flood risk but sit outside FEMA’s 100-year flood zone, according to the nonprofit First Street Foundation. Statewide, that figure rises to 350,000.

    Prices creeping up

    Not only are few homeowners covered by flood insurance, but the numbers are headed in the wrong direction. Since the National Flood Insurance Program began raising some of its premiums last year to account for growing flood risk, hundreds of thousands of people have dropped their federally backed insurance policies.

    In Florida, about 48,000 fewer households have federal flood insurance this year than in 2021, according to FEMA figures. The trend suggests that affordability remains a concern, particularly for homeowners who are poorer or live on fixed incomes, as many Floridians do.

    “Making flood insurance cost more means that less advantaged people are going to stop buying coverage,” Besbris said. “When these things happen like Ian — and they will happen more and more often — whole communities, in addition to individual households, are not going to have clear pathways to recovery.”

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  • South Carolina surveying damage from Ian

    South Carolina surveying damage from Ian

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    South Carolina surveying damage from Ian – CBS News


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    South Carolina is beginning its long cleanup after Hurricane Ian. Thousands of homes and businesses were flooded and without power, however, Gov. Henry McMaster said there were no reported deaths. Michael George has the latest.

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  • Tracking Ian: Georgia and the Carolinas brace for storm

    Tracking Ian: Georgia and the Carolinas brace for storm

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    Tracking Ian: Georgia and the Carolinas brace for storm – CBS News


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    CBS News senior weather producer David Parkinson gives the latest forecast as Ian sets its sights on the South Carolina coast.

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