State of emergency in Del
Norte County
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| by
Nathan Rushton, 12/30/2005 |
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Although
the rain-swollen Klamath River is receding after several days of
steady rain, Del Norte County officials are bracing for the next
series of storms expected to pummel the North Coast this
weekend.
Flooding on the river peaked early Thursday morning, but the
rising waters caused some voluntary evacuations and minor
damage.
National Weather Service officials are calling the mouth of the
Klamath River “ground zero” for the combination of high
tides and heavy runoff currently being experienced along the
North Coast.
At the town of Klamath, just a few miles from the river’s
entrance to the ocean, the river crested at 40.42 feet — 6
feet above flood stage — at midnight Wednesday, according to
the California Department of Water Resources.
The last time the river significantly flooded was in January
1997, when the river rose to more than 45 feet following a
series of tropical storms that dumped heavy and warm rain across
the region, which melted the snow pack, according to National
Weather Service data.
A state of emergency for Del Norte County was declared Thursday
due to flooding on the Klamath River and several of its
tributaries, but officials said they are in a “hurry up and
wait” period in anticipation of more rain expected to hit the
area tonight.
Allen Winogradov, emergency services coordinator for the Del
Norte County Sheriff’s Office, said the declaration of a local
emergency resolution for the county was passed Thursday during a
special session of the Board of Supervisors.
Local infrastructure damage to roads and sewer systems was the
basis for the declaration, with debris removal being the biggest
expected financial impact, Winogradov said.
Although sections of highways 101 and 169 were temporarily
closed Wednesday night, county law enforcement officials are
continuing to monitor roads and are expecting them to be closed
again when waters rise again Saturday.
A command post set up for local, county and state law
enforcement and emergency services agencies is in place north of
the town of Klamath to coordinate flood relief efforts,
according to Lonnie Levi, the fire chief for the Klamath Fire
Department.
With the help of the fire department, approximately 25 families,
along with their mobile homes, were moved out of low-lying areas
along the river in voluntary evacuations that were completed
prior to the peak flood Wednesday, Levi said.
“There were some travel trailers that were inundated and I am
sure that some vehicles that didn’t get moved had water in
them,” Levi said.
More than 1,200 people live in the town of Klamath, but the
majority of the town’s residents were not affected by
flooding, according to officials.
Martin Kelly, public affairs officer of the Del Norte Chapter of
the Red Cross, said the agency had provided motels in Crescent
City for two displaced Klamath residents Wednesday.
The Red Cross is watching the weather conditions and are ready
to handle more evacuees if needed, Kelly said.
“If the situation arises, we will be opening a shelter,”
which can accommodate up to 100 people, Kelly said.
The Yurok, California’s largest Native American tribe, has
approximately 5,000 tribal members who live along the Yurok
Reservation’s lands that extend out one mile on each side from
the mouth of the Klamath River upriver 44 miles.
The Yurok Tribe’s Public Relations office reported that the
conditions among the tribe’s residents are improving following
the flood’s peak, but that the tribal council was holding
safety meetings and preparing for more rain, as well as working
in collaboration with the Del Norte County agencies.
“Right now the river is receding and unless there is a great
big change in the weather it looks like we are out of the woods
today,” said Joe Galeoto, the Yurok Tribe’s Chief of Public
Safety. “After that, we’ll have to see.”
Initial surveys of the flood area by Yurok tribal officials
determined that no homes or permanent structures were
significantly affected by flood waters. |
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