Melting Snow Causing Heavy Flooding In Wash. State

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GENE JOHNSON | January 7, 2009 11:52 PM EST | AP

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In this photo provided by the Washington State Department of Transportation, water rushes past a washed out road near Blewett Pass on U.S. highway 97 in Washington State on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2009 in Washington State. (AP Photo/Washington State Department of Transportation)

SNOQUALMIE, Wash. — Rain and high winds lashed Washington state Wednesday, causing widespread avalanches, mudslides, flooding and road closures as the heavy snowfall that has buried parts of the state began to rapidly melt.

More than 30,000 people were told to leave their homes in flood-endangered areas across western Washington as authorities warned of heavy flooding.

"This is going to be a memorable flood event," said Andy Haner, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Seattle.

Fire trucks rolled through Orting, about 10 miles southeast of Tacoma, with loudspeakers advising everyone to leave the town and surrounding valley, home to about 26,000 people. Sandbags were placed around many downtown homes and businesses as the Puyallup River neared record levels. It was forecast to crest Thursday.

"They expect the town of Orting to go under water," Pierce County sheriff's Detective Ed Troyer said, adding that the flooding could be the worst in more than a decade.

Tacoma Mayor Bill Baarsma declared a civil emergency because of flood risks at Puyallup River.

Throughout the state, about 60 highways were closed, including all east-west passes across the Cascade Mountains. A 20-mile stretch of Interstate 5 near Chehalis in southwestern Washington was also closed Wednesday evening.

Warmer temperatures and heavy rains were melting snow dumped on the mountains during a weekend storm, with 10 inches of snow melting in a 12-hour period at Snoqualmie Pass, about 50 miles east of Seattle, Haner said.

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In Snoqualmie, a town 25 miles east of Seattle, kayakers paddled in the street as city officials urged residents in the flood plain of the Snoqualmie River to leave before they became trapped.

Volunteers gathered at a city park to stuff sandbags for residents to protect their homes.

June Garvin said she lived high on a ridge outside the danger area but wanted to help.

"The river came up so fast that for some people, sorry to say, sandbags aren't going to do a darn thing," Garvin said. "The water's going to get in if it wants to."

Chris Caviezel, who has lived at Snoqualmie Pass for about seven years, said conditions were the worst he has seen.

"We're getting avalanches and we're being flooded," Caviezel said.

As of early Wednesday evening, Marblemount saw nearly 6 inches of rain and almost 7 inches of rain fell at Snoqualmie Pass in the past 24 hours.

The weather service predicted another 4 to 8 inches of rain would fall on the coast and Cascades through Wednesday night and 1 to 3 inches elsewhere in the region.

Several dozen people and a number of pets were rescued by boat Wednesday morning after being trapped by high water outside Orting, Pierce County sheriff's Detective Ed Troyer said.

The weather service warned that rain-saturated snow would place even more weight on Spokane rooftops, increasing the threat of collapse. The city's schools will be closed Thursday, giving its 29,000 students a third unscheduled day off this week.

The state Fish and Wildlife Department said six wild elk that took refuge in a storage barn in Metaline Falls were killed Tuesday when the snow-laden roof collapsed. Officers said it was rare for elk to be so desperate that they would enter a barn.

Over the past two weeks, extreme temperatures in Alaska _ 60 below zero in Stevens Village, which is about 90 miles northwest of Fairbanks _ have grounded planes, disabled cars, frozen water pipes and even canceled several championship cross country ski races.

In Oregon, high winds toppled trees along U.S. 26, forcing the highway's closure and stranding some motorists while crews worked to clear the road. The weather service posted flood warnings for areas along several rivers and a flood watch for all of northwest Oregon.

Snow, sleet and freezing rain made roads hazardous across the Great Lakes region into New England on Wednesday, forcing the closure of hundreds of schools.

The weather service issued winter storm warnings and ice storm warnings from Pennsylvania into Maine, and winter weather advisories for parts of Michigan and Ohio.

Michigan police blamed four traffic deaths on ice-covered roads.

Many schools in upstate New York, Massachusetts, Vermont and New Hampshire also closed or opened late because of snow.

___

Associated Press writers Doug Esser and Tim Klass in Seattle and Steve Quinn in Juneau, Alaska, and AP Photographer Ted Warren in Orting contributed to this story.

SNOQUALMIE, Wash. — Rain and high winds lashed Washington state Wednesday, causing widespread avalanches, mudslides, flooding and road closures as the heavy snowfall that has buried parts of the...
SNOQUALMIE, Wash. — Rain and high winds lashed Washington state Wednesday, causing widespread avalanches, mudslides, flooding and road closures as the heavy snowfall that has buried parts of the...
 
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I live in a flooded zone. South Prairie Creek is a river and has locked in 10 of us property owners. We're on high ground, but are worried about our neighbors. Please keep us in your thoughts.

Yep, it has been a tough winter for us in WA ville.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:05 AM on 01/08/2009
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Yep, SouthPrairie Creek, right across from our access road, is flooooooooooded. We're on high ground, but stranded with nowhere to go. The Creek is a river and the rivers are torrents. It is crazy.

Though we're fine I'm worried about my neighbors, so please keep us in your thoughts.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:56 AM on 01/08/2009

WC Fields loved the rain, and so do I.

In near 50 years in Portland (PDX) I've not shoveled rain once.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:42 AM on 01/08/2009

I'm up next to the border and we've had it all in the last month--snow, arctic winds, freezing temps, ice storms, and now floods. We've been trapped inside with people we like, love, hate in varying degrees. Sanity is going to be in very short supply if this goes on much longer.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:18 AM on 01/08/2009

My partner and I have been trying to make it east to Tri-Cities since before the Solstice. I thought this might be the weekend -- guess not. Best wishes to all my Washingtonian brethren (and e'eryone else). Stay high, warm and dry! Just remember, it's barely January. ;)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:43 AM on 01/08/2009
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In Spokane our nerves are raw: 3 weeks of back-breaking snow shoveling, 3 weeks of being house-bound, 3 weeks of fear that our roof will collapse, 3 weeks of helplessness as more than 6 feet of snow piled up day after day, 3 weeks of having a trip to the grocery store that's less than a block away seem like an arctic adventure akin to Edmund Hillary scaling Mt. Everest. And NOW this rain that has turned our streets into veritable ice rinks and waterfalls. Honestly, when will this ever end? Is there no one out there who would be willing to send some tickets to the Bahamas for me?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:04 AM on 01/08/2009

You deserve a break, that's for sure. Hope it ends soon. Grab some flip flops, crank the thermostat to 80 and make some blender drinks. It won't change the weather but you won't care as much.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:15 AM on 01/08/2009
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Great Idea, Mama! Will do!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:01 PM on 01/09/2009

Finally saw grass for the 1st time in my yard today after over 3' of snow in a couple of weeks. I5 is shutdown in Fife and South for many miles. No way around. All the mtn passes are closed. Many cities have been evacuated. I live on the East of King Co and am high enough to be OK, but the wind is knocking down trees. So far the electricity is still on.

And we're not done yet :(

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:35 PM on 01/07/2009

hang in there, it's going to be a long night. Hope you and your stay safe, warm and dry!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:37 PM on 01/07/2009

It's windy and pouring rain outside my window right now, but I won't complain after 2 weeks of snow, trapped in our neighborhood (which is built into the side of a canyon above Puget Sound), No one could get in or out for a few days before Christmas due to the steepness of the streets. But right now with this flooding I'm just glad we live near the sound, and not a river. Hope everyone stays safe!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:19 PM on 01/07/2009

Yeah, it's fairly unpleasant here. And -- we're USED to rain!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:30 PM on 01/07/2009

i spent 23 years in PDX and i NEVER got used to it. i was a depressed drunken mess most of the time. live in palm springs now with 350 days of sunshine and wouldn't go back for nuttin. i'm glad you're used to it. i couldn't hack it. gotta give me points for trying, tho. ;-)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:18 AM on 01/08/2009

the desert is brown and ugly and lacks enough water to sustain life
glad you're used to it though

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:51 AM on 01/08/2009
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