Valley in Washington state prepares for flood
By GEORGE TIBBITS
Associated Press Writer
AUBURN, Wash. (AP) - On a sunny fall Saturday, friends and
neighbors gathered at Bobby Kendall's place to help him build a
2-foot barrier of sandbags around his suburban Seattle home. Such
get-togethers have become a familiar ritual on the block in recent
weeks as people lend a hand to neighbors to barricade homes.
NYSE:BA Updated: 16:00 ET 51.97 -0.66 |
A similar effort is under way at a Boeing Co. facility, where
workers put up an 8-foot-high floodwall. Managers of a nearby
Starbucks roasting plant are in constant communication with federal
disaster officials.
It is all part of a feverish effort to fortify the heavily
developed Green River Valley against a potentially catastrophic
flood during the winter rainy season.
Engineers have said there is a 1-in-4 chance that a flood will
inundate the valley. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has been
working around the clock to prevent flooding, namely by pumping
tons of grout into the problem area - a dam abutment that was found
badly weakened by a torrential storm last winter.
In recent weeks, some 40 miles of levees have been raised with
sandbags, evacuation routes and emergency warning systems have been
set up, and residents have been urged to assemble ``go kits'' -
documents, medicine and other valuables they'll need if forced to
flee on short notice.
``My house is my biggest asset,'' Kendall said. ``I don't want
it to wash away or get filled with mud.''
Other efforts have ranged from homeowners installing one-way
valves to prevent toilets backing up, to Boeing erecting the
sandbag wall around its sprawling Space Center in nearby Kent.
Boeing also is barricading its costly aircraft flight simulators in
Renton.
The valley cities and King County have held scores of
informational meetings, passed out hundreds of thousands of
sandbags, posted extensive information on special Web sites and
organized a ``reverse 911'' system to automatically call or message
residents if an emergency is declared.
Besides Boeing, the valley floor has miles of malls, warehouses,
and businesses small and large, including Recreational Equipment
Inc.'s headquarters and Starbucks' regional roasting plant.
Starbucks did not provide specifics about its flood-preparation
plan and how it will protect its beans and employees, but said it
is doing its best to ``minimize impact to our supply chain and
operations.''
The four major cities in the Green River Valley - Auburn, Kent,
Renton and Tukwila - all face the threat of flooding. An estimated
25,000 to 30,000 people live in flood zones, but Hillman Mitchell,
the emergency management director in Tukwila, points out that
200,000 to 300,000 work or shop in the valley each day.
``The number of people who may have to move could be very
large,'' he said.
And beyond the physical damage, planners are warning people and
businesses to prepare to be displaced for three weeks or more.
Boeing spokesman Bill Cogswell said the 3- to 4-mile barrier
around the Kent complex is necessary insurance to protect about
3,000 employees, a data center and the plant's valuable defense
work. Boeing is putting its valuables on higher floors, moving
equipment out and planning which of its other Seattle-area
facilities can take over if water reaches the plant or more likely,
blocks valley roads.
``Our aim is to insure the safety of our employees, to make sure
we minimize the potential business impact and that everyone knows
where to go and what to do in the event of a flood,'' he said.
If a deluge comes, it will be because nature found a way to
thwart a half-century of flood prevention.
Earlier this year, an abutment to the Howard Hanson Dam on the
upper reaches of the Green River was found to be seriously weakened
after record January rains. To reduce the danger the abutment might
fail, the Corps of Engineers, which operates the flood control dam
22 miles east in the Cascade foothills, immediately restricted the
reservoir to about 30 percent of capacity, greatly reducing its
ability to limit how much water is released downstream.
Corps district commander Col. Anthony Wright has said that to
avoid further damage to the abutment, there is a 25 percent chance
he might have to release enough water this winter to flood much of
the valley.
He says he will do everything possible to operate the dam
without flooding anybody. ``But I'm not going to endanger the lives
of the people downstream by storing too much water before we get
this dam fixed,'' Wright said.
``The Corps of Engineers tells us to be prepared for inches to
feet,'' says Capt. Kyle Ohashi of the fire department in Kent,
which could see 8 feet or more of water in worst-case scenarios.
``All we can do is assume the worst, prepare for it and hope it
never gets to that point.''
When the dam was completed in the early 1960s, it ended the
floods that frequently swamped the then-agricultural Green Valley.
Farmers began selling their fields as much more valuable commercial
land, and many forgot how dangerous the river can be.
Not Mamie Petersen, though, who remembers the pre-dam floods
near the Auburn home she and husband Roy have shared for 59 years.
She and her husband loaded up on free sandbags at a city park.
``Let me tell you, that river is boss,'' she said.
Kerry Denny said he and his relatives were gathering more than
2,000 sandbags to protect their homes, including his on Riverview
Drive.
``It's pretty anxious,'' he said. ``You wake up in the morning
thinking about it and you go to bed thinking about it.''
11/04/09 19:41
© Copyright The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The information contained In this news report may not be published, broadcast or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.