Chattanooga Times Free Press

Residents, businesses sue dam operator over flooding

- BY COREY WILLIAMS

WEST BLOOMFIELD, Mich. — Residents and businesses in Central Michigan communitie­s that were submerged when two dams failed this week on Friday sued the operator of the dams and two state agencies charged with overseeing the structures.

The lawsuit came as yet more residents were forced to evacuate their homes after being overwhelme­d by flooding along the Tittabawas­see River and conjoining waterways.

About a dozen people have left their homes in Spaulding Township where some roads and fields are under 4 to 5 feet of floodwater, but some in the community refused to leave despite warnings, Fire Chief Tom Fortier said Friday.

Water stood 2 to 3 feet deep in some houses, 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.

President Donald Trump declared an emergency Thursday.

Several homes were damaged in Midland, but no one has been injured or killed. Selina Tisdale, a Midland city spokeswoma­n, said Friday that displaced residents are allowed to return home if it is safe to do so.

The flooded Tittabawas­see and Shiawassee rivers flow into the Saginaw River, and that’s presenting a danger for Spaulding Township, about 100 miles north of Detroit.

“The river levels are so high, they are trying to find the lowest spot and that happens to be us,” Fortier said. The National Guard and fire department­s were filling about 3,000 sandbags to hold back the water.

A lawsuit filed in federal court in Detroit Friday alleges that the dams’ operator, Boyce Hydro, “failed to operate, fix, or repair the dams in accordance with the establishe­d standard of care, resulting in catastroph­ic injury and damage to residents and their properties.” The lawsuit also names the state Department of Environmen­t, Great Lakes and Energy and the Michigan Department of Natural Resources.

The lawsuit seeks unspecifie­d damages in excess of $75,000. Fegan-Scott, a law firm that specialize­s in class action suits, is representi­ng businesses and homeowners affected by the flooding.

The Associated Press sent an email Friday seeking comment from Boyce Hydro. Representa­tives of both state agencies declined to comment, citing the pending litigation.

The nearly century-old Edenville Dam has been the target of lengthy investigat­ions by federal regulators. Officials have said the Sanford Dam, built in 1925, was overflowin­g during the flooding but that the extent of structural damage wasn’t known.

Dow Chemical Co. is headquarte­red in Midland and it has a plant next to the river. 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 last century — to determine if any contaminat­ion was released.

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

Dow said $250,000 will go to an assistance fund to help Dow employees directly hit by the flooding and $250,000 will go to the United Way to provide resources for Midland County families affected by the flooding. Another $500,000 will be allocated for needs that surface throughout the recovery and rebuilding phase.

Wixom Lake in Midland County’s Hope Township lost most of its water when the Edenville Dam failed.

Glenn Hart’s home in Hope Township 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.

With more rain forecast early next week, officials are keeping their eyes on the skies and the ground.

“With the area being so wet, any added rain is a concern,” said Nick Assendelft, spokesman for the Michigan Department of Environmen­t, Great Lakes, and Energy.

Water levels on two lakes — Secord and Smallwood — behind two other dams “have been brought down somewhat to take pressure off those facilities so their conditions can be assessed,” Assendelft said. “The last thing we need now is for there to be another rain event anywhere close to what we had earlier this week.”

“The last thing we need now is for there to be another rain event anywhere close to what we had earlier this week.”

– NICK ASSENDELFT

 ?? NEIL BLAKE/THE GRAND RAPIDS PRESS VIA AP ?? Above: Flood damage to Michigan Highway 30 is seen Wednesday at Wixom Lake in Michigan, where floodwater­s took out the bridge. Left: People survey the flood damage to the Curtis Road Bridge in Edenville, Mich., over the Tittabawas­see River. The bridge sits just south of Wixom Lake where the dams failed.
NEIL BLAKE/THE GRAND RAPIDS PRESS VIA AP Above: Flood damage to Michigan Highway 30 is seen Wednesday at Wixom Lake in Michigan, where floodwater­s took out the bridge. Left: People survey the flood damage to the Curtis Road Bridge in Edenville, Mich., over the Tittabawas­see River. The bridge sits just south of Wixom Lake where the dams failed.
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