Chattanooga Times Free Press

FATAL FLOODING

ONE DEAD AFTER HEAVY RAINS IN REGION

- BY BEN BENTON STAFF WRITER

Floodwater­s raging through Soddy Daisy on Wednesday killed a woman and forced dozens of other people from their homes as a record-setting onslaught of rain continued to pummel the tri-state area this week.

This morning’s forecast calls for more heavy rain to arrive around rush hour, with accumulati­ons that could threaten rainfall records. Hamilton County Schools announced Wednesday night that classes would be canceled today, and Walker County Schools in Georgia are on a twohour delay.

“Not all school areas will be significan­tly impacted by rain and high water, but there are too many issues with roads in the community and conditions around schools in the north section of Hamilton County to have school on Thursday,” read a release from schools spokesman Tim Hensley.

“Trash cans and trash kept coming, and it was just getting browner and browner and higher and higher.”

– SODDY-DAISY RESIDENT KENNA HARRISON

In Hamilton County, SoddyDaisy was particular­ly hard-hit Wednesday.

The victim, whose name had not been released late Wednesday, lived on Durham Street on the north end of the town of a little more than 13,000. SoddyDaisy Police Capt. Jeff Gann said the death was believed to be a drowning directly related to flooding. The neighborho­od consisting of dozens of homes on Durham Street lies along Little Soddy Creek, which flows down from Walden’s Ridge, west of town, to the Tennessee River.

Emergency officials in the area on Wednesday spent the day checking on residents and rescuing those trapped by rising waters. That was a story duplicated across the region in the wake of the rain system that on Wednesday stretched from the Gulf coast of Louisiana to the New England states.

Good Samaritans were indispensa­ble.

An 11-year-old boy was rescued from a culvert on Coffelt Road after being caught up in rushing water, according to the Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office. The child was uninjured, according to a post on the department’s Facebook page.

A neighbor heard the boy scream and helped keep the child’s head above water until deputies arrived and freed him. Medical officials were called to check the out child.

Hamilton County Emergency Management Agency officials opened a command post at Dallas Bay Volunteer Fire Department Station 2 to support flooding victims and rescue efforts underway in the Dallas Bay and Soddy-Daisy area, spokeswoma­n Amy Maxwell said in a statement issued Wednesday afternoon.

The American Red Cross opened two shelters to assist flood victims in the Soddy-Daisy area; one at the Oak Street Baptist Church at 11340 N. Oak St., and Daisy First Baptist Church at 10185 Dayton Pike. Later in the day Wednesday the Red Cross opened a shelter in Hixson at Trinity Lutheran Church, 5001 Hixson Pike.

The locations in SoddyDaisy are on higher ground than

Durham Street, where resident Kenna Harrison said she has never seen such flooding.

“I was just amazed that usually when we have floods we don’t usually have standing water,” said Harrison, 32, who was at home Wednesday with her newborn son waiting for her husband to return home from a business trip.

“So I was taking some photos and videos and then the next thing I know it was just pouring down the street and I was watching across the street, the church and their little chain-link fence, and it was just ripping it apart,” she said. “Just watching that water come down, it was crazy to say the least.”

Harrison shot video of the rising water flowing past.

“Trash cans and trash kept coming, and it was just getting browner and browner and higher and higher,” said Harrison, who’d made it to her motherin-law’s home in Hixson when interviewe­d by phone. She was worried about an expected “second wave” of heavy rain and wanted to stay in a safe place till the skies brighten, she said.

Harrison said she knew of the death from flooding on her street but didn’t know the victim.

The new mother isn’t so worried about her home as she was just glad to be on high ground.

“We’ll worry about all that stuff later,” she said. “That stuff is replaceabl­e, and people are not.”

Hamilton County Mayor Jim Coppinger said he toured the worst-hit areas in Soddy-Daisy with Mayor Robert Cothran and Commission­er Rick Nunley. He

said the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency will visit to evaluate the damage and see if anywhere in the county would be eligible for financial support “to bring some normalcy back to the community.”

“I applaud the city of SoddyDaisy’s response to this catastroph­ic event that took the life of an individual,” Coppinger said. “All of the citizens of Hamilton County mourn with the family that lost a loved one in this weather event.”

The lingering rain caused widespread flooding, school delays and cancellati­ons, and officials throughout the area who weren’t looking for stranded storm victims spent the day repairing power lines, removing downed trees and working to clear blocked roads.

Portions of the Tennessee Riverwalk in downtown Chattanoog­a were closed.

Hamilton County schools first were delayed an hour, then canceled by 11 a.m. Law enforcemen­t, in addition to working traffic accidents and the like, found themselves handling the traffic snarls as parents and school buses converged on local schools.

The deluge was unusual in that it centered on northern Hamilton County, while areas in surroundin­g counties that usually flood were spared.

Emergency managers throughout the region reported some water across roads but no major problems or property damage. However, with more rain expected to fall on saturated ground and swollen creeks, they’re staying on the alert.

“If we just have showers, we don’t have many issues, but if we get an hour, hour and a half of heavy rain, we’re going to have problems. A lot of our creeks are pretty full,” said Jacky Reavley, emergency management director for Rhea County.

WRCB meteorolog­ist Brittany Beggs said rainfall totals for today could be an inch or more and could even threaten the record of 1.7 inches for Sept. 27.

“We’ve had over 5 inches of rain in the past 48 hours,” Beggs said about 3:15 p.m. Wednesday.

Precipitat­ion totals for Chattanoog­a for the week started out with a record-breaking 3.41 inches on Monday, followed by a half inch on Tuesday, then another inch or so on Wednesday that brought the tally for September to more than 6 inches, she said.

That’s 2 inches above normal “and September’s not even over yet,” Beggs said. “We haven’t had above-normal rainfall in September since 2012.”

Between Wednesday night and Thursday night, another 2 inches could fall, she said.

“Luckily, it looks like Friday there’ll be just a few isolated showers, then we dry out this weekend,” Beggs said.

Flood warnings were issued throughout the region Wednesday morning, and a flood watch issued by the National Weather Service in Morristown stands until at least 8 p.m. today. The watch includes East Tennessee counties from Knoxville south to the Georgia state line and west to the Cumberland Plateau, weather service officials said.

Flood watches also stand in Middle Tennessee and Northeast Alabama, according to weather service officials in Huntsville.

By midday Wednesday, the days of accumulati­ng rain began changing a few record books in Chattanoog­a.

Richard Garuckas, weather service meteorolog­ist in Morristown, Tennessee, said rainfall accumulati­ons in Chattanoog­a from Sept. 19 to Sept. 25 are the third-highest ever observed for that week in any year. Chattanoog­a got 7.38 inches from Sept. 19-25, 2009, and 4.72 inches Sept. 19-25, 1975, he said.

Garuckas said the Chattanoog­a area has accumulate­d 45.09 inches of rain since Jan. 1, making the year the 31st wettest for the first 268 days of the year. The wettest Jan. 1 to September 25 period ever in Chattanoog­a was in 1994 when the year-to-date total was 60.74 inches, he said.

Up to 8 inches of rain has fallen near Decatur, Tennessee, over the past couple of days, causing localized flooding and swelling Chickamaug­a Lake to a half foot above its normal summertime pool, the Tennessee Valley Authority said Wednesday.

James Everett, senior manager of TVA’s River Forecast Center in Knoxville, said the short, heavy bursts created a lot of runoff and some localized flooding.

“We’re spilling water at most of our mainstream dams, but we’re still seeing very high lake levels at Chickamaug­a and Watts Bar,” Everett said.

TVA has cut off most of the flow from major reservoirs at Norris, Cherokee, Douglas and elsewhere in eastern Tennessee and western North Carolina to limit flooding problems downstream.

“As rainfall continues tonight and through tomorrow — and perhaps lingering into Friday and this weekend — we’ll remain on high alert,” Everett said Wednesday. “We’re not showing any water levels above flood stage at any location on the Tennessee River, although we may get close to flood stage at places downstream like in Savannah.”

Everett urged lake users to be cautious and said some lakefront property owners should be prepared for higher lake levels.

He said TVA has talked with organizers of the Little Debbie Ironman Chattanoog­a triathlon scheduled for Sunday. Continued spillage through Chickamaug­a Dam could affect the swimming portion of the event.

Water flow through the Chickamaug­a lock on Wednesday was 78,000 cubic feet per second. That’s significan­tly above the 46,000 cubic feet per second flowing through the hydroelect­ric turbines at the Chickamaug­a Dam but below the 85,000 amount that would restrict navigation on the Tennessee River.

 ?? STAFF PHOTOS BY DOUG STRICKLAND ?? A woman looks at rising floodwater­s from the garage of a home on Dallas Hollow Road after heavy rainfall on Wednesday in Soddy-Daisy. Heavy rains throughout the week caused flooding and closed schools across the region.
STAFF PHOTOS BY DOUG STRICKLAND A woman looks at rising floodwater­s from the garage of a home on Dallas Hollow Road after heavy rainfall on Wednesday in Soddy-Daisy. Heavy rains throughout the week caused flooding and closed schools across the region.
 ??  ?? Floodwater­s nearly cover a trampoline behind a Dallas Hollow Road home after heavy rainfall Wednesday in Soddy-Daisy.
Floodwater­s nearly cover a trampoline behind a Dallas Hollow Road home after heavy rainfall Wednesday in Soddy-Daisy.
 ?? Source: WRCB-TV Channel 3 ??
Source: WRCB-TV Channel 3
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND ?? Part of Dayton Pike collapsed beneath the roadway after heavy rainfall on Wednesday in Soddy-Daisy.
STAFF PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND Part of Dayton Pike collapsed beneath the roadway after heavy rainfall on Wednesday in Soddy-Daisy.

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