Las Vegas Review-Journal

Arizona dam holding as water recedes

Reservatio­n community evacuated as precaution

- The Associated Press

PHOENIX — A southern Arizona dam that had been at risk of breaking and flooding a small village held steady Wednesday as the lake behind it receded after being swollen with runoff from the remnants of Tropical Storm Rosa.

The water level at Menagers Dam dropped approximat­ely 4 feet over the course of the day after rising to just a foot below the top of the earthen dam, said Matt Smith, a spokesman for the Tohono O’odham Nation.

Ali Chuk, a Native American community with 162 people, had been evacuated Tuesday night.

Smith did not immediatel­y have an update on the evacuation­s after officials inspected the dam and lake by helicopter and determined the water was receding.

During the past three days, moisture from the storm dumped 5 to 7 inches of rain in isolated mountain areas near the dam, the National Weather Service said. Flooding from runoff made roads impassable.

The tribal safety department said 30 people had been evacuated from another village on the reservatio­n because of flooding.

Elsewhere in the state, flash flood watches in Phoenix and other areas were set to expire later Wednesday as the storm left the region and headed for Colorado and Utah.

The weather service said up to 1 inch of rain had fallen in parts of Maricopa County, which includes Phoenix.

A separate flash flood warning was issued through Thursday morning for Yavapai County north of Phoenix due to possible thundersto­rms.

The weather service said a record 2.35 inches of rain had fallen at Phoenix Sky Harbor Internatio­nal Airport as of Tuesday night.

That made it the rainiest October day since records have been kept, topping the 2.32 inches recorded on Oct. 14, 1988.

It also marked the eighth-rainiest day in Phoenix history for any date.

 ?? Mike Christy ?? The Associated Press The earthen Menagers Dam that was in imminent danger of failing, potentiall­y sending floodwater­s rushing into the Tohono O’odham village of Ali Chuk, has held steady as the lake behind it receded on Wednesday southwest of Sells, Ariz.
Mike Christy The Associated Press The earthen Menagers Dam that was in imminent danger of failing, potentiall­y sending floodwater­s rushing into the Tohono O’odham village of Ali Chuk, has held steady as the lake behind it receded on Wednesday southwest of Sells, Ariz.

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