Albuquerque Journal

More evacuation­s in flooded Michigan

EPA says Dow must assess damage to contaminat­ed Superfund site

- BY COREY WILLIAMS ASSOCIATED PRESS

WEST BLOOMFIELD, Mich. — More Central Michigan riverside residents evacuated their homes Friday after being overwhelme­d by flooding from two failed dams that submerged communitie­s further upstream earlier this week, authoritie­s said.

About a dozen people who live near the Tittabawas­see River in Spaulding Township have evacuated, but some in the community refused to leave their homes, despite warnings, Fire Chief Tom Fortier said Friday morning.

Fields and roads were under several feet of water, resembling wide, shallow lakes. Water stood 2 to 3 feet deep in some houses where the owners decided to stick out the flooding, Fortier said.

The Tittabawas­see became engorged late Tuesday when the aging Edenville and Sanford dams failed after heavy rain. The river crested Wednesday in Midland — about 20 miles upstream from Spaulding Township — leaving the small city and surroundin­g areas under several feet of water and forcing about 11,000 people to evacuate their homes.

A number of homes in Midland were damaged, but no injuries or fatalities were reported. Officials were not keeping track of how many people have returned home.

“We’ve cleared all to return if they are able to do so safely,” Selina Tisdale, a spokeswoma­n for Midland, said Friday.

With the slow recession of water in the Midland area, the focus has shifted to damage assessment, cleanup and rebuilding.

Glenn Hart’s home in Hope Township, about 16 miles north of Midland, escaped the brunt of the flooding. But, on Friday, the 66-year-old was removing debris from his property, including kayaks, boats and pieces of docks.

“I’m trying to find who this belongs to, to make sure people get their stuff,” he said.

He will be without natural gas for at least two weeks, but Hart has an electric water heater in a barn that escaped damage.

“Everybody is coming to my house to take a shower,” he said.

President Donald Trump signed an emergency declaratio­n Thursday authorizin­g the Department of Homeland Security and the Federal Emergency Management Agency to coordinate disaster relief efforts.

Dow Chemical Co. is headquarte­red in Midland and it has a plant next to the river. The company’s imprint is clear throughout the city.

When the river crested, the floodwater­s mixed with containmen­t ponds at the Dow plant and the company admitted the flooding could displace sediment from a downstream Superfund site, though it said there was no risk to people or the environmen­t.

The U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency said state officials would evaluate the plant and that Dow must to assess the Superfund site — contaminat­ed with dioxins the company dumped in the past century — to determine if any contaminat­ion was released.

On Friday, Dow and its foundation announced a $1 million donation for flood recovery efforts.

 ?? DAVID GURALNICK/DETROIT NEWS ?? Tim Evans, owner of Fieros Forever, inspects the damage to his Lamborghin­i Diablo kit car that lay in a muddy ditch near downtown Sanford, Mich., on Thursday. Evans lost several vehicles to the flooding.
DAVID GURALNICK/DETROIT NEWS Tim Evans, owner of Fieros Forever, inspects the damage to his Lamborghin­i Diablo kit car that lay in a muddy ditch near downtown Sanford, Mich., on Thursday. Evans lost several vehicles to the flooding.

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