Ohio flooding

Ragman

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
TO ALL: Please be careful out there.


By JOHN SEEWER, Associated Press John Seewer, Associated Press – 1 hr 1 min ago
FINDLAY, Ohio – Rivers rose and flooded out residents a day after wicked storms whipped across the eastern half of the nation, lashing some areas with heavy rain and tornadoes that damaged buildings and killed at least three people.

Flooding from an ice-jammed creek forced about 200 people from their homes in a western New York hamlet where the waterway flows into Lake Erie. The main street in the northwest Ohio city of Findlay, badly hit by flooding in August 2007, was under 3 feet of water Tuesday morning.

"This doesn't even shock you anymore," said Casey Hensley, manager of a Domino's Pizza store in Findlay. "It makes you mad, but it doesn't shock you."

Sandbags were stacked throughout downtown as forecasts called for the Blanchard River to rise 6.5 feet above flood level. That's just a foot lower than the catastrophic flood four years ago that swamped the city, 45 miles south of Toledo, and caused millions of dollars in damage.

In Tennessee, three people were killed when high winds and rain wreaked havoc across the state Monday, uprooting trees and flooding roads.

Officials in the city of White House, north of Nashville, told WSMV-TV that a public works employee died when he was washed into a drain pipe after pulling debris out of it to unclog it.

A 79-year-old man died in Franklin County, in the southern part of the state, when his mobile home was knocked off its foundation and he was pinned underneath. A woman was hurt and taken to a hospital.

"I don't know if it was a tornado or straight line wind, but whatever it was beat us up pretty good," Franklin County Sheriff's Sgt. Chris Guess said.

In Knoxville, heavy rain fell Monday morning and afternoon, flooding streets, basements and backyards. A man driving a truck was killed when he hit a tractor-trailer on a highway near Murfreesboro; authorities blamed wet roads.

Six people were treated at a hospital in Maryville, Ill., where storms tore off part of the roof at a church.

In New York, residents evacuated Monday as the Cattaraugus Creek flooded the Lake Erie community of Sunset Bay, a cluster of seasonal and year-round homes in the town of Hanover, southwest of Buffalo.

In Ohio, the flooding divided Findlay in half, forcing Tuesday morning commuters to take long and slow detours to get around the water.

Downtown, a 4-foot wall of an estimated 1,000 sandbags kept floodwaters out of Hensley's pizza shop. During the record flood in 2007, water got into the building and damaged the oven, Domino's manager Casey Hensley said.

"The sad thing is we just got rid of the sandbags that we had kept from the last flood," he said, adding that new sandbags were trucked in Monday. He got in to work at 6 a.m. Tuesday through a back door that was still accessible and said the shop would be open and delivering pizzas.

A mix of melting snow and heavy rain threatened flooding in all 88 of Ohio's counties, the National Weather Service said. Findlay's residents know all too well what to do when faced with the threat of high waters.

Warren Krout lost just about everything inside his pawn shop when floodwaters swamped his store nearly four years ago. With the river rising again, he had help this time.

University of Findlay football players lugged mattresses, an air hockey table and reclining chairs to the second floor of Krout's store. "Stack it as tight as you possibly can," he told the young men.

What they couldn't carry was put up on concrete blocks or left to chance.

"Some of this stuff is just going to have to go down the river," Krout said Monday.

Han**** County emergency director Garry Valentine said 13 people were rescued from their homes and taken to an emergency shelter Monday night.

"We anticipate a flood every time it rains," Krout said.

Crews in boats rescued nearly 30 people, including a group trapped in a mobile home park in western Ohio, said Mike Robbins, Mercer County's emergency management director.

And flooding 4 feet deep destroyed a building at Cleveland's zoo and killed a peregrine falcon.


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OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
As far as the flooding issue goes it comes as no surprise or shock....with all the moisture this winter and spring rains...history of the region dictates this will happen....People should have been more prepared for this and the counties and state should have had a plan of readiness in place....maybe they did, maybe they didn't...just saying...IMO
 

Ragman

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
As far as the flooding issue goes it comes as no surprise or shock....with all the moisture this winter and spring rains...history of the region dictates this will happen....People should have been more prepared for this and the counties and state should have had a plan of readiness in place....maybe they did, maybe they didn't...just saying...IMO

Remember, you can always use your inflatable doll as a floatation device. :D
 

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
Emergency crews(FEMA) I know dirty word..but they've been out since January around the Red River Valley of the Dakotas holding town meetings and visiting farms advising. The spring melt IF it comes quick will be a mess again. Countys and state have been backhoeing drainage ditches, clearing debris....Guard trucks are preloaded with sandbags....Farmers have built small diversion ditches around barns and homes where possible....kind of redesigned the lay of the land to divert runoff...it all helps..
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
Not living in flood plains helps too. Too much "reshaping" of the land, draining and building in the wrong places are as much to blame as anything. You cannot defeat water. You might win a battle or two but when water wants to win, it will, and there is nothing you can do about it.
 

Ragman

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
Not living in flood plains helps too. Too much "reshaping" of the land, draining and building in the wrong places are as much to blame as anything. You cannot defeat water. You might win a battle or two but when water wants to win, it will, and there is nothing you can do about it.

So no need for a moat around the home of the "Benevolent Dictator of Michigan" ?
 

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
Not living in flood plains helps too. Too much "reshaping" of the land, draining and building in the wrong places are as much to blame as anything. You cannot defeat water. You might win a battle or two but when water wants to win, it will, and there is nothing you can do about it.

I know that Joe....water will find a way....BUT sometimes just a couple well placed loads of dirt and some landscaping around a home could mean the difference of a few inches as to feet...in some cases...ya just can't stick your head in the sand and do nothing...
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
I know that Joe....water will find a way....BUT sometimes just a couple well placed loads of dirt and some landscaping around a home could mean the difference of a few inches as to feet...in some cases...ya just can't stick your head in the sand and do nothing...


No you can't just do nothing. You can beat small floods. Nothing will beat the "big one". A good number of the floods we see today are directly caused by man's goofy work. Like building towns on dry lake beds then getting surprised when the lake comes back. Like the Devils Lake region in North Dakota.
 

Ragman

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
haha nice :D

but on a serious note. I wish nothing but the best to the people in Ohio and hope everyone is ok.

I agree. I hope all the fine folks in Ohio nothing but the best.

Except on that Saturday in November.:D
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
So no need for a moat around the home of the "Benevolent Dictator of Michigan" ?

Nope, I am going to "rebuild" the Great Black Swamp and that will fix MUCH of the problem. ALL of the wetlands in S.E. Michigan are going to returned to their former glory. Now, how best to get rid of Detroit. That would be the best place to start. Nothing of value left there. :p
 

Ragman

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
Nope, I am going to "rebuild" the Great Black Swamp and that will fix MUCH of the problem. ALL of the wetlands in S.E. Michigan are going to returned to their former glory. Now, how best to get rid of Detroit. That would be the best place to start. Nothing of value left there. :p

Not true. Don't forget about Sloes BBQ ----- YUMMO!!!!:p
 

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
No you can't just do nothing. You can beat small floods. Nothing will beat the "big one". A good number of the floods we see today are directly caused by man's goofy work. Like building towns on dry lake beds then getting surprised when the lake comes back. Like the Devils Lake region in North Dakota.

or even Monroe....:p
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
At least leave me a Waffle House. :p

OK, but it will be AT LEAST 20 miles off of Lake Erie!!


In reality, something needs done. Places that are always flooding need moved. You cannot continue to do the same thing all the time and expect a different out come. Rebuilding in flood plains is just asking for trouble. It will just flood again.
 
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