From the Yakima Herald-Republic Online News.


Posted on Friday, January 09, 2009

Good recession -- Floods ease
By DAVID LESTER
Yakima Herald-Republic

YAKIMA, Wash. -- Flood waters continued to recede Friday, even as the effects lingered in some areas near Ellensburg, Selah and in the Lower Valley.

Emergency response officials began to gear down from three days of high water that, in some cases, paralleled the experience of the last major flood in 1996.

The travel paralysis caused by closed freeways in the Cascades also began to subside as Snoqualmie Pass opened to traffic Friday. Some roads in the Ellensburg area were opened for residents to return to their homes.

But none of that was consolation to Kim McLoud, whose family had to flee their home on South Rushmore Road in East Selah late Thursday when water levels rose and caused slight damage to their home.

They were still dealing with a flooded road Friday afternoon.

"It kind of went around our house. It was amazing," she said.

Some problems for areas next to the Yakima River will continue into today, when a flood warning is expected to expire, ending three days of rising water.

Selah Fire Chief Jerry Davis said water reached areas and in depths in his community that weren't reached in 1996.

"It could be the water started opening up new channels. We have water into areas where we hadn't had it before," he said.

The Army Corps of Engineers on Friday afternoon was still strengthening the levee that protects the Regional Wastewater Treatment Plant, east of Yakima.

Scott Schafer, acting manager for the treatment plant that serves much of the urban Yakima area, said the emergency action by the Corps was prompted by evidence of seepage through the levee.

He said the treatment plant was never in danger.

An emergency declaration issued by Yakima County commissioners authorized the Corps of Engineers to begin adding large rocks to stabilize the levee.

The corps also added rocks to the levee just south of the Terrace Heights bridge.

Elsewhere in the Yakima Valley, the flood crest moving down the Yakima River posed some problems in the Central Valley, where Jones Road was closed from North Camas Road to North Track Road.

Portions of other roads were also closed Friday, the Yakima County Office of Emergency Management reported.

In Ellensburg, some residents were allowed to return to their homes Friday as the water receded. An evacuation of the Riverbottom Road area was canceled.

The county Emergency Operations Center scaled back to a recovery mode, officials said.

Residents there and those living along the Yakima River in Yakima County are now getting ready for the recovery phase.

Kittitas County officials are asking residents to add up their losses as part of a request for disaster assistance.

State health officials urged rural residents whose property was flooded to boil water from their well and have it tested to make sure the water is not contaminated.

"It's better to know what you have," said Carolyn Cox, public information coordinator for the state Office of Drinking Water in the state Health Department.

Selah Fire's Davis said he's glad to see the water receding.

"We are happy to see the daylight. It's been a long couple of days," he said.

 

 

(L-R) Howard Summerville, Nelson Bernier and Al Bernier return from checking their homes on South  Rushmore Road in Selah on Jan. 9, 2009.
GORDON KING/Yakima Herald-Republic
(L-R) Howard Summerville, Nelson Bernier and Al Bernier return from checking their homes on South Rushmore Road in Selah on Jan. 9, 2009. "No water was in 'em," said Summerville. "They're good - they're kind of on high spots." They evacuated their homes about 6 p.m. on Thursday, Jan. 8 as the nearby Yakima River continued to rise enough to flood their land.
Colton Holbrook, 14, makes his way along a fence to avoid walking in the deep water as he goes to inspect his home on South Rushmore Road in Selah. Though the pasture and yard was flooded his home stayed dry. By late Friday afternoon the floodwaters had begun to recede.
GORDON KING/Yakima Herald-Republic
Colton Holbrook, 14, makes his way along a fence to avoid walking in the deep water as he goes to inspect his home on South Rushmore Road in Selah. Though the pasture and yard was flooded his home stayed dry. By late Friday afternoon the floodwaters had begun to recede.
The floodwaters had receded enough by late Friday afternoon, Jan. 9, 2009 for Nelson Bernier to return to his home on South Rushmore Road in Selah. Bernier had to evacuate his home Thursday night, Jan. 8 when the water began lapping at his home.
GORDON KING/Yakima Herald-Republic
The floodwaters had receded enough by late Friday afternoon, Jan. 9, 2009 for Nelson Bernier to return to his home on South Rushmore Road in Selah. Bernier had to evacuate his home Thursday night, Jan. 8 when the water began lapping at his home.
Ken Zeutenhorst lowers a rock into place as he works Friday morning, Jan. 9, 2009 to further armor a levee on the Yakima River just downstream from the Terrace Heights bridge in Yakima. The work was prompted by signs of erosion in the levee system along the river near Yakima.
GORDON KING/Yakima Herald-Republic
Ken Zeutenhorst lowers a rock into place as he works Friday morning, Jan. 9, 2009 to further armor a levee on the Yakima River just downstream from the Terrace Heights bridge in Yakima. The work was prompted by signs of erosion in the levee system along the river near Yakima.
Floodwaters still surround the clubhouse of the River Ridge Golf Course in Selah on Jan. 9, 2009. The clubhouse was surrounded early Jan. 8 and the water continuted to rise throughout the day and night though the nearby Yakima River was forecast to crest on Jan. 8.
GORDON KING/Yakima Herald-Republic
Floodwaters still surround the clubhouse of the River Ridge Golf Course in Selah on Jan. 9, 2009. The clubhouse was surrounded early Jan. 8 and the water continuted to rise throughout the day and night though the nearby Yakima River was forecast to crest on Jan. 8.
The KOA campground on Thorp Highway in Ellensburg remains flooded on  Friday, Jan. 9, 2009.
SARA GETTYS/Yakima Herald-Republic
The KOA campground on Thorp Highway in Ellensburg remains flooded on Friday, Jan. 9, 2009.
Ryan Fortier ties down a load of belongings on the back of a pickup as he starts moving things out of his home on Riverbottom Rd. in Ellensburg on  Friday, Jan. 9, 2009. The road runs near the Yakima River and water came across the road and flooded Fortier's garage and yard and missed flooding the house, which sits several feet above the ground, by inches.
SARA GETTYS/Yakima Herald-Republic
Ryan Fortier ties down a load of belongings on the back of a pickup as he starts moving things out of his home on Riverbottom Rd. in Ellensburg on Friday, Jan. 9, 2009. The road runs near the Yakima River and water came across the road and flooded Fortier's garage and yard and missed flooding the house, which sits several feet above the ground, by inches.
Ryan Fortier, center, and Johnny Boitano, right, carry a four-wheeler out of Foriter's home after water from the Yakima River, which is located just across the road, receeded on Friday, Jan. 9, 2009. Fortier, who is in the process of moving to another house, lived on Riverbottom Rd. in Ellenburg.  The Yakima River overflowed its banks, covered the roadway and flooded Fortier's garage and yard. The inside of Fortier's house, which sits level with the top step, stayed dry.
SARA GETTYS/Yakima Herald-Republic
Ryan Fortier, center, and Johnny Boitano, right, carry a four-wheeler out of Foriter's home after water from the Yakima River, which is located just across the road, receeded on Friday, Jan. 9, 2009. Fortier, who is in the process of moving to another house, lived on Riverbottom Rd. in Ellenburg. The Yakima River overflowed its banks, covered the roadway and flooded Fortier's garage and yard. The inside of Fortier's house, which sits level with the top step, stayed dry.
The U.S. Army Corp of Engineers, working with local excavating companies, reinforces a dike on Riverbottom Rd. in Ellensburg. Workers came from Chief Joseph Dam in Bridgeport, WA to work on the project, which required 1400 yards of rock and will be finished Friday night.
SARA GETTYS/Yakima Herald-Republic
The U.S. Army Corp of Engineers, working with local excavating companies, reinforces a dike on Riverbottom Rd. in Ellensburg. Workers came from Chief Joseph Dam in Bridgeport, WA to work on the project, which required 1400 yards of rock and will be finished Friday night.
Curtis Johnson, who works for Thayer Excavating in Ellensburg, hauls rock to a dike on Riverbottom Rd. in Ellensburg on Friday, Jan. 9, 2009. The U.S. Army Corp of Engineers began reinforcing the dike on Thursday evening.
SARA GETTYS/Yakima Herald-Republic
Curtis Johnson, who works for Thayer Excavating in Ellensburg, hauls rock to a dike on Riverbottom Rd. in Ellensburg on Friday, Jan. 9, 2009. The U.S. Army Corp of Engineers began reinforcing the dike on Thursday evening.

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