The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

ATLANTA: A look back at the damaging floods of 2009,

Ten years ago, large swaths of metro Atlanta were flooded when unrelentin­g rain fell from Sept. 15-22, 2009, on already saturated ground. Roads were impassable, bridges were underwater, homes were inundated and even roller coasters at Six Flags were subme

- By Arielle Kass, akass@ajc.com

The flooding

There already were record levels of moisture when storms developed in the area Sept. 15, said Laura Belanger, a senior service hydrologis­t at the National Weather Service in Peachtree City. Then the storms continued with near-constant rainfall for more than a week.

“We had pretty wet conditions late that summer,” said Belanger, who was an intern at the NWS in 2009.

The flooding peaked overnight Sept. 20 and into Sept. 21.

Fulton, DeKalb, Gwinnett, Bartow and Cherokee counties all got at least 5 to 7 inches of rain in a 24-hour period that began the evening of Sept. 20. It was worse in Cobb and Douglas counties. One Douglas location was swamped with more than 21 inches of rain in 24 hours, Belanger said.

Cobb County hit hard

Sweetwater Creek’s levels rose to 20 feet above flood stage — soaring past the creek’s previous high-water mark of 9 feet above flood level. The Austell area, in particular, sustained quite a bit of damage. The Great American Scream Machine, a roller coaster at Six Flags, was mostly underwater.

“It was not something that we’d really seen before,” Belanger said.

Jim and Margaret Hobbs live in Vinings, on the Chatta

hoochee River. They’d raised their home 7 feet in the 1980s, when wet weather had caused water to fill their yard.

After the 2009 flood, they raised it again.

“This was a real flood,” Jim Hobbs said. “It was scary.”

There was almost 2 feet of water on the first floor of the Hobbses’ home, he said. When it receded, they had mold, and the mud stuck like concrete.

“It was a mess,” Margaret Hobbs said. “It was nasty.”

It took more than a year to get everything back to normal. Margaret Hobbs said the flooding has had a lasting impact on her: She’s always nervous when there are heavy rains. But she said the disaster brought neighbors together.

say we live on the river, and sometimes in the river,” she said.

The roads

Natalie Dale, a spokespers­on for the Georgia Department of Transporta­tion, said flooding on highways was exacerbate­d by blocked drains. Leaf debris and other trash clogged the system and made it harder for the water to drain off roadways.

There was significan­t flooding on the downtown connector, I-20 and I-575, as well as Stone Mountain Freeway. All were closed. Rivers often overwhelme­d bridges and roads, leading to closures across the metro area. Many residents took to boats to check on neighbors or move belongings.

Belanger said the speed with which the water overtook roads was one of the factors that led to phone alerts warning about flash flooding. There were more than 100 rescues across the metro area.

The damage

Eleven people died in the storms, including 10 in Georgia. Of those, eight died in their cars as they tried to traverse floodwater­s.

The flooding also did a lot of damage. Belanger said the official estimate of $500 million is likely an undercount, since the figures don’t include the cost of debris removal.

More than 20,000 homes and businesses were damaged. Cobb County purchased more than 75 homes in flood hazard areas and more than 125 acres of vacant floodplain. In Sandy Springs, three homes destroyed by the 2009 flood were torn down and replaced with Windsor Meadows passive park.

The damage included the replacemen­t of several bridges that were washed out. Seventeen counties received federal disaster declaratio­ns.

 ?? JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM ?? Ben Prince (left) uses his canoe to ferry neighbor Jim Hobbs and his dog, Dylan, along Paces Ferry Drive to and from their home as they gathered supplies Sept. 22, 2009. Vinings residents and business owners faced major flooding that month as the Chattahooc­hee River made its way up the banks near Paces Ferry Road. Many residents with upscale homes were hit hard.
JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM Ben Prince (left) uses his canoe to ferry neighbor Jim Hobbs and his dog, Dylan, along Paces Ferry Drive to and from their home as they gathered supplies Sept. 22, 2009. Vinings residents and business owners faced major flooding that month as the Chattahooc­hee River made its way up the banks near Paces Ferry Road. Many residents with upscale homes were hit hard.

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