Hurricane prep begins in Western North Carolina
As The Smoky Mountain News went to print Tuesday, a potentially catastrophic storm was barreling down on the Carolinas, with North Carolina poised to bear the brunt of it.
Through the raincloud: Agricultural community takes stock after record-breaking rains
A month of rain capped off by the arrival of Tropical Storm Alberto has caused massive flooding, landslides and loss of life in North Carolina’s western region, but the mountains west of Asheville were mostly able to escape the devastation experienced in Polk, McDowell, Avery and Buncombe counties.
“I think everyone’s optimistic that we dodged a bullet to have got 20 inches of rain in two weeks and not gotten any more extensive flooding than what we had,” said Joe Deal, agriculture extension agent for Macon County Cooperative Extension.
Macon flood damage exceeds $1 million
Heavy rains and high waters in December have resulted in more than $1 million in flood damage in Macon County.
Public advised to take precautions, be alert
Weather Hazard: An Upper Low moving across our WNC Mountains, coupled with Hurricane Joaquin will produce heavy rain and wind gusts in Haywood County. From now through Monday morning communities south of Maggie Valley, Waynesville, Clyde and Canton can expect about 10” of rain, while the municipalities and northern communities can expect about 7” of rain. Wind gusts of 20-30mph are possible, with the highest gusts over our mountain tops.
Expected Vulnerabilities
- Trees down
- Power Outages
- Intermittent flash flooding in low lying areas along rivers and streams
- Possible debris flows in drainages and particularly in areas with disturbed and exposed soils where rainfall may accumulate.
Recommended Actions
- Everyone should maintain close contact with ever changing weather conditions.
- Be aware of potential hazards around your home, work place and travel paths.
- Stay away from flooding water and wear a personal flotation device when operating nearby.
- Be prepared for extended periods of power outages. Do not call 911 for power outages, call the appropriate power company.
- The majority of fatalities associated with flash flooding are due to attempting to drive through standing water. Even shallow moving water can make tires a flotation device! 2 feet of water can float a 3000lb car.
- Rapidly moving water and debris can lead to trauma.
- Broken electrical, water, gas and sewer lines can result in severe injuries.
- Look for tilted trees, poles, fences, walls and holes on hillsides.
- Be extra cautious at night when it is harder to see flood dangers.
- Emergency Agencies- Travel around your communities, make a list of potentially hazardous areas and/or vulnerable citizens. Provide them with good preparedness advice.
- Extra staffing of all agencies will be helpful.
- All swift-water rescue teams on standby, once the team leaders have an inventory and roster, share your numbers with the 911 Communications Center.
- Emergency Management staff will be on duty throughout the weekend. Call the non-emergency line to 911 Communications to speak with them.
- Ensure shelter teams are on standby and prepared. IF activated, the location is our HHS facility (Old Walmart) on Paragon Parkway.
- NCDOT and municipalities should continue ensuring all culverts; ditches and storm water systems are clear of debris and open. Maintain emergency access of all highways, streets and roads for emergency egress and ingress.
Haywood braces for flooding, mudslides as heavy rain sets in
Haywood County convened an emergency joint conference Friday to ensure response readiness in the event of flooding or mudslides triggered by the heavy rain expected over the next three days.
In the shadow of Duke dams, heavy rains can trigger downstream flooding
With September’s tropical storm season gearing up, residents living downstream of large Duke Energy dams in Western North Carolina may spend the fall on high alert, wondering when and if Duke will open the flood gates to release pent-up water from its dams on the Nantahala and Tuckasegee rivers.
Macon board plows into floodplain rules
The Macon County planning board signaled its intent this month to loosen rules on development in floodplains.
Filling the flood plain under debate in Macon
Macon County is weighing whether to relax its existing rules that ban fill dirt in the flood plain.
The county’s planning board is split on the issue and struggling to find mutual ground to stand on.
Muddy waters: WNC feels the blues following unrelenting rainstorms
A four-day stretch of heavy rains fell on Western North Carolina, leaving residents wondering if it would ever end. Some areas witnessed up to 10 inches.
The following collection of stories and interviews captures the drama and tension of the unrelenting rains as they wreaked havoc across the mountains.
Redrawn flood maps render Jackson’s industrial park suddenly worthless
The redrawing of flood maps for North Carolina has made one of Jackson County’s million-dollar properties a tough sell.
The Jackson County Industrial Park, which was formerly the Drexel furniture factory in Whittier, sits along the Tuckasegee River. But starting in 2010, when the new flood maps were drawn largely based on aerial photography, the property was flagged as being in a floodway — the most severe of floodwater classifications.