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Welcome to the Washington Department of
Ecology Floods site. Please follow the links below.
If you need help finding something or have a question regarding flooding,
please contact us.
Emergency Information
- Floodwaters can be extremely dangerous. The force of six inches of swiftly
moving water can knock people off their feet. The best protection during a
flood is to leave the area and go to shelter on higher ground.
- Flash flood waters move at very fast speeds and can roll boulders, tear out
trees, destroy buildings, and obliterate bridges. Walls of water can reach
heights of 10 to 20 feet and generally are accompanied by a deadly cargo of
debris. The best response to any signs of flash flooding is to move
immediately and quickly to higher ground.
Cars can be easily be swept away in just 2 feet of moving water. If
floodwaters rise around a car, it should be abandoned. Passengers should climb
to higher ground.
- After the Floods - Dangerous Waste and Storm Events -
Information for Businesses
- Flood and Storm Cleanup for Households
Click here for what to
do before, during and after a flood.
DID YOU KNOW..?
- Individuals and business owners can protect themselves from flood losses
by purchasing flood insurance through National Flood Insurance Program.
Homeowner's policies do not cover flood damage. Information is available
through local insurance agents and emergency management offices.
- Flooding has caused the deaths of more than 10,000 people since 1900.
Property damage from flooding now totals over $1 billion each year in the
United States.
- More than 2,200 lives were lost as a result of the Johnstown, Pennsylvania
flood of 1889. This flood was caused by an upstream dam failure.
- Nearly 9 of every 10 presidential disaster declarations result from
natural phenomena in which flooding was a major component.
- On July 31, 1976, the Big Thompson River near Denver overflowed after an
extremely heavy storm. A wall of water 19 feet high roared down the Big
Thompson Canyon where many people were camping. 140 people perished and
millions of dollars of property were lost.
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Copyright © Washington State Department of Ecology. See http://www.ecy.wa.gov/copyright.html.