The Niagara Falls Review

Trump declares emergency for flooded Michigan communitie­s

About 11,000 people forced to evacuate homes after dual dam failures

- MIKE HOUSEHOLDE­R, COREY WILLIAMS AND TAMMY WEBBER

MIDLAND, MICH.—Many Central Michigan residents remained cut off from their homes Thursday even as floodwater­s receded, with senior citizens among the scores of displaced people staying in shelters after flooding overwhelme­d two dams, submerged homes and washed out roads.

U.S. President Donald Trump, who was in Michigan to visit a Ford production plant, signed an emergency declaratio­n authorizin­g the Department of Homeland Security and the Federal Emergency Management Agency to co-ordinate disaster relief efforts.

At Midland High School, 90 per cent of people who slept in the school’s gym were senior citizens, shelter co-ordinator Jerry Wasserman said. He said extra precaution­s were in place due to the combinatio­n of the guests’ ages and the coronaviru­s pandemic.

In Midland, 61 people spent Wednesday night and Thursday morning in temporary shelters, according to city spokespers­on Selina Tisdale. That number — mostly the elderly and families — dwindled throughout Thursday as floodwater­s receded and some residents were able to return home, she said.

Much of the area remained underwater, including in Midland, the headquarte­rs of Dow Chemical Co. And floodwater­s continued to threaten downstream communitie­s.

It could be days before the full scope of damage can be assessed, officials said. No floodrelat­ed deaths or injuries have been reported.

“The damage is truly devastatin­g to see, how high the water levels are, to see roofs barely visible in parts of Midland, and to see a lake that has been drained in another part,” said Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, who toured Midland County on Wednesday.

The floodwater­s mixed with containmen­t ponds at a Dow Chemical Co. plant and could displace sediment from a downstream Superfund site — — a toxic-waste dump that’s cleaned up under a federal program — though the company said there was no risk to people or the environmen­t.

The flooding forced about 11,000 people to evacuate their homes in the Midland area, about 225 kilometres north of Detroit, following what the National Weather Service called “catastroph­ic dam failures” at the Edenville Dam, about 32 kilometres northwest of Midland, and the Sanford Dam, about 14 kilometres northwest of the city.

 ?? SETH HERALD AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A man walks across a washed out West Saginaw Road in Sanford, Mich., on Thursday.
SETH HERALD AFP/GETTY IMAGES A man walks across a washed out West Saginaw Road in Sanford, Mich., on Thursday.

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