Hawaii, flood
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Hawaii Digs Out From Another Round of Flooding
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Marck Aphay’s Otake Camp home of more than 12 years now sits in ruins, smashed into the Waialua Bridge about 400 yards from where it once stood, after this week’s flood tore the duplex from the ground.
A flash flood warning was issued for Maui, Molokai and Lanai amid heavy rainfall, even as evacuation orders were canceled on Oahu.
As excavators lifted waterlogged furniture from gutted homes and volunteers shoveled thick mud under a blazing sun, residents of Otake Camp were left to pick up the pieces after devastating flooding from the second Kona-low storm — many without clear answers from property owners or government agencies.
Dozens packed the Waialua Elementary cafeteria Tuesday night, where a neighborhood board meeting quickly turned tense as frustrations over recent flooding boiled over.
Floodwaters lifted homes and cars, causing an estimated $1 billion in damage, and 5,500 people were under evacuation orders as a 120-year-old dam threatened to fail.
KLAS Las Vegas on MSN
Red Cross of Southern Nevada volunteers deploy to Hawaii to aid flood victims
LAS VEGAS (KLAS) — Several American Red Cross of Southern Nevada volunteers headed to Honolulu, Hawaii, to support communities devastated after historic flooding hit the island. Over the past few days,
Authorities issued urgent evacuation orders on Oahu’s North Shore after a potential failure at Wahiawa Dam threatened life-threatening flooding. Residents in Haleiwa and Waialua were told to evacuate immediately as flooding was reported along nearby streams.
“They came in on surfboards and we paddled out through our neighborhood. It was like the Twilight Zone.”
Troops have helped rescue more than 200 people as large parts of Oahu remain drenched from flash floods in recent days.