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View Full Version : People From Nevada: You All OK?



Kathianne
01-05-2008, 01:49 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080105/ap_on_re_us/canal_break


Levee breaks in Nevada, 3,500 stranded

47 minutes ago

A canal levee ruptured early Saturday after heavy rainfall, pouring more than 3 feet of near-freezing water into about 800 homes and stranding about 3,500 people in their agricultural desert town, authorities said.

A 30-foot-long section of the Truckee Canal broke around 4 a.m. in Fernley, about 33 miles east of Reno, officials said. No injuries were reported.

Truckee River water flowing into the canal was diverted upstream and water in the canal was receding, said Ernie Schank, president of the Truckee-Carson Irrigation District.

The area had gotten snow plus heavy rain on Friday as a storm pummeled the West Coast, raising a threat of mud slides and flooding in California, blacking out thousands of customers and blanketing the Sierra Nevada range with deep snow.

"It was a mess up there last night," said Chuck Allen of the Nevada Department of Public Safety. "It's so cold here. The snow is about 2 inches in depth and the temperatures are right near the frigid mark both for the rescuers and rescuees."

Residents were being taken by 10 school buses to schools, and bulldozers were brought in to shore up the levee, Allen said. The nearby Fallon Naval Air Station provided three helicopters in case anyone needed rescue from a roof and local officials deployed boats, Allen said.

"Water to the edge of our driveway and rising quickly," resident Bill Sanchez told CNN. "There's some cars there, the water's up to the doors."

Repairs on the levee were started immediately, Schank told KTVN-TV in Reno.

The canal brings water from the Truckee River, starting just east of Reno and running to the farming community of Fallon, about 60 miles away.

In December 1996, flooding from a rupture of an irrigation canal that is part of the Truckee-Carson Irrigation District surrounded about 60 Fernley homes with as much as 2 feet of water.

On Jan. 3, 1997, flooding from the Truckee River swamped motels, casinos and other businesses in Reno and made hundreds of homes uninhabitable.

(This version corrects the time of the breach to about 4 a.m. instead of 5 a.m.)

nevadamedic
01-05-2008, 02:07 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080105/ap_on_re_us/canal_break

Wow, I hadn't heard about that. Fernley is about 40 miles from me and about 35 miles from Pale Rider so this wouldn't really effect us, but thanks for the concern.

Pale Rider
01-05-2008, 02:46 PM
My power went out about five o'clock yesterday afternoon. I looked out my patio doors and the sky was lit up from town lights, so I knew it was a local outage. But, the wind was blowing harder than I'd ever seen it before, and it was white out condition. The snow was blowing almost straight across. I thought I'd better get to the store and pick up some more lamp oil and batteries if this was going to keep up for three days like they were saying. Thank God for big ass 4X4's. Wal Mart was practically sold out of flashlights, batteries, bread, water, things like that. The shelves were completely bare like I've never seen them. But by the time I got back home, the snow was still coming down real hard and the wind had died down some, and snow flakes the size of a silver dollar, and they had the power back on. They said that it was snowing 3-6 inches an hour at the peak of the snow fall. The weather service called it "insane." The snow then tapered off after awhile, but around ten thirty the wind kicked back up and it was snowing again. The power started flickering again so I just decided to go to bed and try and sleep for as long as I could before the house got too cold and wake up. The power never went off again though, which was fine with me.

I've been watching the local news about the levee break over at Fernley. They're saying now that there was a 4.0 earth quake about that time located some 20 miles away around 4 AM, and the levee broke around 4:30 AM. The flood effected around 800 homes and as many as 4,000 people. They've been running news video of people being rescued off roof tops, and they say that the water is receding fast. Bad situation though, but I think they have it under control. They said that there hasn't been one report of injury. Never a dull moment in Nevada. And the weather channel is saying that by this afternoon, we can brace for round two.

I wonder how manu is doing over in the bay area. They've had their share of problems over there too, like mass power outages.