The Standard (St. Catharines)

‘You’ve got to hurry up and go!’

San Jose mayor admits failures in flood evacuation order

- JANIE HAR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN JOSE, Calif. — The mayor of San Jose acknowledg­ed that the city failed to properly notify residents to evacuate during a flood emergency early Wednesday when some people said they got their first notice by seeing firefighte­rs in boats in the neighbourh­ood.

City officials ordered more than 14,000 residents to leave their homes as water from swollen Coyote Creek flooded homes and temporaril­y shut down a portion of a major freeway. Another 22,000 people near the creek were encouraged but not required to evacuate.

“If the first time a resident is aware that they need to get out of their home is when they see a firefighte­r in a boat, that’s a failure,” Mayor Sam Liccardo said at a news conference. “We are assessing what happened in that failure.”

Liccardo declined to go into detail, saying there would be time for reflection after the emergency was over.

“We’ve got to address the needs of the families who have been displaced first. We’ll have a lot of time to analyze what went wrong,” he said.

The city began alerting residents of the flood situation on Tuesday via social and mainstream media and sending emergency alerts to those who had signed up for it, said city spokesman Dave Vossbrink. When water levels changed dramatical­ly overnight, they sent police and firefighte­rs door-todoor during the dramatic overnight evacuation.

“It was scary,” said Irma Gonzalez, 59, whose two-story apartment complex is alongside the creek. She was awakened about 2:30 a.m. by police pounding on her door. “They were like, ‘You’ve got to hurry up and go! Move it!’ ”

Gonzalez spent the night at her sister’s house and said she was thankful for the wakeup call and evacuation. “It’s better than to wake up and have water coming in.”

Resident Sandy Moll said she had prepared for about a foot of water, but the flooding spilled over sandbags stacked 3 feet high and broke down her back door. Moll told the Mercury News in San Jose she was angry at the lack of warning.

“I’m seething,” she said. “It’s the lack of informatio­n and forewarnin­g when they had to have known. They never even said you need to prepare for a major flood.”

Bob Benjamin, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service, said the water level in Coyote Creek reached a 100-year high during this week’s storm.

The floodwater­s were receding Wednesday but the mayor said it would be at least another day before residents would be allowed to return home.

Assistant City Manager Dave Sykes said officials first became aware of the rising water late Tuesday when firefighte­rs began evacuating about 400 people from a low-lying residentia­l area.

City officials did not believe the waters would spread to other neighbourh­oods and did not expand the evacuation orders.

About 300 people stayed in emergency shelters set up by the city, while many found other accommodat­ions.

Coyote Creek flooded after Anderson Dam in Santa Clara County reached capacity during heavy weekend rains.

“We’ve been pummeled by a number of storms since Jan. 9. We’ve been letting out as much water as we possibly could,” said Rachel Gibson, a spokeswoma­n for the Santa Clara Valley Water Project, which operates the dam.

Managers of the Anderson Dam were taking advantage of a break in the storms to draw down the reservoir, which is supposed to be limited to 68 per cent of capacity because of earthquake concerns but is now at 100 per cent, said Jim Fiedler, a chief operating officer at the Santa Clara Valley Water District.

He said it could take nine weeks to bring it down to normal levels. Inspectors in 2010 discovered the dam is vulnerable to a major quake and $400 million is being spent to make it earthquake-proof by 2024.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Floodwater­s surround homes and cars on Wednesday, in San Jose, California.
GETTY IMAGES Floodwater­s surround homes and cars on Wednesday, in San Jose, California.

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