Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Wales bears brunt as storm floods Britain

- Pan Pylas

LONDON – Storm Dennis hammered Britain on Sunday, bringing a month’s worth of rain in just 48 hours to parts of South Wales, which bore the brunt of the country’s second severe storm inside a week.

Rivers across Britain burst their banks, and a number of severe flood warnings remained in place as authoritie­s strived to get people to safety and to protect homes and businesses. The Met Office, Britain’s meteorolog­ical service, said the disruption is expected to carry into Monday.

Major incidents have been declared in a number of areas in England and Wales as authoritie­s mobilized resources to deal with the impact of the overflowing rivers that have cut off some communitie­s.

A man in his 60s died after falling into the River Tawe in South Wales at midmorning; his body was found downstream, Dyfed-Powys Police said on social media. However, police said the death was not being treated as suspicious or being linked to the bad weather.

On Saturday, Dennis was blamed for the deaths of two men who were pulled from the sea in separate searches off Great Britain’s southeaste­rn coast.

Dennis has been so intense that England posted a record number of flood warnings and alerts, and a rare “red warning” for extremely life-threatenin­g flooding was announced in South Wales.

The Met Office only issues its red warning when it thinks the weather will be so dangerous there’s a “risk to life” and that people must take immediate action to protect themselves. It was the first time a red warning has been sounded since December 2015.

Although the warning only lasted a few hours, South Wales Police declared a major incident as firefighters and rescue crews continued to help communitie­s following multiple floods, landslides and evacuation­s. Nearby Gwent Police said residents of Skenfrith, Monmouthsh­ire, were being advised to evacuate because of the flooding.

The Met Office said the highest wind gust recorded was 91 mph at Aberdaron in north Wales on Saturday. It also said a total of 6.1 inches of rain fell at Crai Reservoir in the Welsh county of Powys over 48 hours to Sunday morning. One of the worst-hit areas in South Wales was the village of Nantgarw, Rhondda Cynon Taff, near Cardiff, which saw entire streets left underwater since the early hours of Sunday.

As the wet and windy weather started to clear across parts of the south and headed north and eastward, the number of flood warnings across the U.K. declined. But there were still around 360 of them in place Sunday, from the north of Scotland through to Cornwall in southwest England.

Flood warnings could remain in place for a while since much of Britain is still saturated from last week’s Storm Ciara, which left eight people dead across Europe.

John Curtin, executive director of flood and coastal risk management at the Environmen­t Agency, tweeted that the “high but not exceptiona­l” rainfall figures show how the legacy of Storm Ciara has “driven the widespread significant flooding we’re seeing.”

 ?? ALASTAIR GRANT/AP ?? Powerful waves break on the shoreline around the small port of Porthleven in southwest England on Sunday.
ALASTAIR GRANT/AP Powerful waves break on the shoreline around the small port of Porthleven in southwest England on Sunday.

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