Four deaths have already been confirmed and,
the Larimer County Sheriff's Office said in a Tweet, "a 60-year-old
woman from Cedar Grove ... is missing and presumed dead."
About
200 people in eastern Colorado were unaccounted for, although
authorities said some of those residents might be stranded or cut off
from communication in the region's worst flooding in decades.
More
heavy rain was expected as search-and-rescue teams used boats and
helicopters to pull stranded residents to safety as flash flood waters
toppled buildings, washed out roads and bridges and inundated farmland.
"Given
the destruction, there is a high probability" of more fatalities,
Boulder County Sheriff Joe Pelle said at a media briefing.
Two
small farming communities in eastern Colorado were under evacuation
orders as a surge from the flooding was headed in their direction on the
plains, the Colorado Office of Emergency Management said on Twitter.
"The town of Orchard is in immediate danger. EVACUATE NOW," it said. "The town of Goodrich is under an evacuation order."
The
flooding began overnight Wednesday. It was triggered by unusually heavy
late-summer storms that soaked Colorado's biggest urban centers, from
Fort Collins near the Wyoming border south through Boulder, Denver and
Colorado Springs.
Boulder and towns
along the Front Range of the Rockies north of Denver were especially
hard hit as water poured down rain-soaked mountains and rushed through
canyons that funneled the runoff into populated areas.
The
National Weather Service in Boulder warned of scattered showers and
thunderstorms later on Saturday and into Sunday that could trigger more
flash flooding.
DISASTER EVERYWHERE
North
of Boulder, Lyons was virtually cut off when flood waters washed out
U.S. Route 36 and left residents without power and water for 48 hours.
Among
those confirmed dead were a couple who stopped their car northwest of
Boulder and were swept away by flood waters. Both bodies were recovered,
the man's on Thursday and the woman's on Friday.
Another
casualty was found in a collapsed building near Jamestown, an evacuated
enclave north of Boulder, and still another, a man in Colorado Springs,
about 100 miles to the south, officials said.
On
Friday, Governor John Hickenlooper declared a disaster emergency for 14
counties from the Wyoming border to Colorado Springs. The declaration
authorizes $6 million in funds to be used for flood response and
recovery.
In neighboring New
Mexico, where floods forced the evacuation of hundreds of people in
Eddy, Sierra and San Miguel counties, Governor Susana Martinez on Friday
declared a state of disaster, making funding available to state
emergency officials for recovery efforts.
In
rural Weld County, aerial TV footage showed large stretches of land
covered in brown water, with homes and farms half-submerged.
Weld
County sheriff's spokesman Steve Reams said bridges had been washed out
and nearly every road in and around Greeley, Evans and Milliken was
closed.
The flooding was the worst
in the state since 1976, when nearly 150 people died in Larimer County
in a flash flood along the Big Thompson Canyon.
The
size and scope of property losses remain unquantified, with county
assessment teams not likely to begin preliminary evaluation of the
damage before early next week, once the water has receded, said Micki
Frost, spokeswoman for the Colorado Office of Emergency Management.
No comments:
Post a Comment