Springfield News-Sun

Nearly 50K still have no power after Wash. storm

- By Lisa Baumann

BELLINGHAM,WASH.— Nearly 50,000 Washington state electrical customers still had no power Tuesday after days of heavy rain triggered mudslides and floods and forced the closure of the West Coast’s main north-south highway near the Canadian border, officials said.

The rains caused by an atmospheri­c river — a huge plume of moisture extending over the Pacific and into Washington and Oregon — was easing and road crews managed to reopen southbound lanes of Interstate 5 near Bellingham, Washington. But the highway’s northbound lanes were still closed in the area.

At the height of the storm, about 158,000 electrical customers on Monday had no power and schools in the city of Bellingham were closed on Tuesday for the second day in a row.

North of Bellingham, authoritie­s said one person was still missing Tuesday after being seen in floodwater­s clinging to a tree.

And a motorist in Bellingham was injured when a tree fell on a vehicle. Evacuation­s were ordered in multiple areas as floodwater­s swamped business districts and partially submerged cars in communitie­s north of Seattle and winds gusted at speeds of 60 mph, including one gust of 58 mph at Seattle-tacoma Internatio­nal Airport.

Forecaster­s predicted drier conditions on Tuesday but the National Weather Service issued flood warnings for several rivers around western Washington. Early Tuesday the National Weather Service said there was good news in that the Skagit River at Mount Vernon would crest at near 36 feet — more than a foot below the previous estimate.

Gov. Jay Inslee declared a severe weather state of emergency in 14 counties and said the state Emergency

Management Division, with support from the Washington National Guard, would coordinate the response.

In the town of Hamilton about 80 miles northeast of Seattle, cars and trailers were packed into the parking lot outside the Red Cross evacuation site at Hamilton Baptist Church, where dozens of residents are waiting out the storm, the Skagit Valley Herald reported.

Skagit County officials compared the flood to severe flooding in 2009, when the Skagit and Samish rivers overflowed and caused damage to homes, farms and infrastruc­ture,

 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Benjamin Lopez steps from floodwater surroundin­g his parents’ home Monday in Sedro-woolley, Wash.
ELAINE THOMPSON / ASSOCIATED PRESS Benjamin Lopez steps from floodwater surroundin­g his parents’ home Monday in Sedro-woolley, Wash.

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