Daily Camera : 1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood

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Daily Camera Coverage from September 11 to September 16, 2013

1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood

Photo by Jeremy Papasso / The Daily Camera The Summit County Rescue team works to save Suzanne Sophocles, at center, from her severely flooding home on Friday, Sept. 13, on Streamcrest Drive in Boulder.

FOR A DISTINGUISHED EXAMPLE OF BREAKING NEWS REPORTING

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THE DAILY CAMERA STAFF

n the first days of this historic storm and flooding, it became clear to us that we needed to figure out how, in the midst of our rapid-fire coverage of the incessant breaking events of this storm, we could put such an unprecedented and widespread event into perspective and context for our readers. We also knew that for thousands, following the news was difficult – if not impossible – since they were without power, evacuated from their flooding homes or even homeless after the floodwaters had destroyed their houses. The challenge, beyond simply keeping up with coverage of this news event, was exacerbated by the fact that the Daily Camera only has seven news reporters, one of whom also helps with editing. City editor Matt Sebastian devised a plan and assigned reporters Charlie Brennan and John Aguilar to begin gathering string about the flood, while still actively covering events on the breaking news cycle, for a longer narrative they would collaborate on. While the immediate storm lasted seven days, the news story of the flood continued to break for another four days, making this assignment no small feat. The work – we believe an extraordinary piece and to-date the most comprehensive narrative of the flood – was published online in a multi-page spread supplemented by remarkable photos of the flooding 10 days after the initial flash flood warning/evacuation order, then in print the following day, Sunday, Sept. 22, as the breaking news cycle of this storm waned. It is, in our humble opinion, a remarkable story. PAGE 1


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Main story

The story unfolds

The Daily Camera’s first reporting of flood via Tweets, website and social media Wednesday, Sept. 11

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ScribbleLive social media goes live on The Daily Camera website.

Thursday, Sept. 12

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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Main story

Photo by Paul Aiken / The Daily Camera Aaron Furman checks on flooded basement apartments in the Aspen Grove Apartments off Kalmia Ave. in north Boulder Thursday morning.

Eight days, 1,000-year rain, 100-year flood The story of Boulder County’s Flood of 2013 By Charlie Brennan and John Aguilar, Camera Staff Writers

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he talk on the street the first full weekend of September was about the heat. Boulder tied a record for the date with 93 degrees that Sunday. At Folsom Field the night of Sept. 7, as the University of Colorado football team claimed its first home win in two years, many Buffs fans wore shorts, light shirts and flip-flops, and not much else. The experts said the late-summer bake was going to ease. They talked about a cold front in the forecast for Monday, Sept. 9, likely to break the September simmer. And forecasters were looking at an unusually high level of moisture in the atmosphere. Some much-needed rain was on the horizon. Monday dawned as one more beautiful late-summer day. But clouds began to build over the foothills by midday. Late in the afternoon, the rain started coming down. There was no way to know the region was in the first hours of what experts would ultimately call a 1,000-year rain and a 100-year flood. The rain continued across the county throughout the day Tuesday, prompting Erie to close a PAGE 3


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Main story section of the Coal Creek Trail near Parkdale Circle at midday because of standing water. Little did Erie Parks Division Manager Gary Hegner know at the time that the trail wouldn’t be reopening for weeks, if not months. “Everybody knew there was a lot of rain falling, but not to the extent of what we ended up getting,” he said. “I don’t think anyone could have anticipated quite the severity of what was about to happen.” Four Mile Fire Chief Bret Gibson said he and his crew of volunteer firefighters kept an eye on the falling rain late Tuesday, especially because the 13 square miles of rugged terrain his district covers is still scarred by the 2010 Fourmile Fire and susceptible to runoff and flooding. But it wasn’t until Wednesday morning that Gibson realized what was shaping up outside his window was no ordinary storm. “Monday and Tuesday, our concern levels weren’t that high,” he said. “By Wednesday morning, we knew we had achieved ground saturation.” Wednesday, Sept. 11: News flash: ‘Storm to boost annual moisture’ “Storm gives Boulder chance at average annual moisture total” was the headline greeting Camera readers in Wednesday’s morning edition. That was after 1.27 inches of rain had fallen between 5 p.m. Monday and 5 p.m. Tuesday. Boulder’s total for the year was now at 14.26 inches. “We’re doing OK” for annual rainfall, said

With a staff of four photographers, miles of Boulder County’s roadways destroyed and mountain communities accessible only by foot, The Daily Camera’s photographers worked 24/7. They covered this story for 18 days stopping only to sleep.

National Weather Service meteorologist Jim Kalina. Few had noticed two days before, the NWS had issued a flash-flood watch over the middle of the day for the Hyde Park burn area to the north in Larimer County — the first of many associated with the historic storm now underway. Forecasters saw a low-pressure system parked over the Utah Basin, fed by a southerly flow of tropical moisture, flanked by a high-pressure ridge to the northeast and upslope conditions that would keep rain in the forecast. “The incredible expansion and activity on Wednesday is the missing element that didn’t show up ahead of time,” said Bob Glancy, warning coordination meteorologist for the NWS. “So, we were reacting to that with warnings on Wednesday. We were thinking on the order of 2 to 3 inches of rain, causing flooding. We weren’t thinking on the order of 8 inches of rain, causing flooding.” Earlier that day, a group of 78 fifth-graders from Louisville’s Fireside Elementary School — along with three teachers, a student teacher and 10 parents headed up to Cal-Wood Education Center near Jamestown. They anticipated three vigorous days of hiking and games and science-based environmental education — and being safely back in their beds at home Friday night. But throughout the day, it would rain. Children and adults alike were getting soaked. “I didn’t realize how much was really coming down,” said Shannon Burgert, a fifth-grade teacher at Fireside. “There was nothing to indicate that maybe we shouldn’t go up there or anything like that.” Soon, she said, “We were all borrowing gear. My boots fell apart.” Apart from the uncharacteristic downpour, Wednesday seemed at first like just another rainy day down in Boulder. The initial two postings that day on the city of Boulder’s Facebook page PAGE 4


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Main story congratulated CU for ranking 36th on a list of public universities. Another invited residents to design their own transit system tool. Then came this city posting: “Holy rain Batman! As a result, trails in the Marshall Mesa, Flatirons Vista and Doudy Draw areas south of #Boulder are closed due to muddy conditions.” But the first serious sign things could tilt out of control came from Erie at 6:07 p.m. An officer had responded to a call of standing water on Vista Parkway and a manhole cover that had popped from its moorings. Not long after that bulletin, two patrol officers checking out flooding in the Grandview neighborhood got stuck and had to call for help. At 6:25 p.m., a transformer caught fire near Erie High School, and power lines were reported down on Erie Parkway. Water on some streets was surging to 3 feet in depth. “Things started rapidly evolving and rapidly going south on this,” Erie Police Chief Marco Vasquez said. “It went from, ‘We got some rain going on’ to, ‘This is turning into a pretty serious event.’” Longmont was seeing much of the same and was forced to shut down the St. Vrain Greenway at 8 p.m., fearing isolated flooding. Earlier, the city’s public works director, Dale Rademacher, had walked that greenway with City Manager Harold Dominguez.

The National Guard, Federal Emergency Management Agency, regional and local emergency rescue crews created a web of agencies The Daily Camera covered during the flood. The Daily Camera’s flood coverage has continued with the current rebuilding efforts.

“Dale said, ‘You know, they’re predicting four to six inches with this.’ And we both went, ‘This could be an issue,’” Dominguez told the Longmont Times-Call. Back in Boulder, the tone on the city’s Facebook page would shift with the next posting: “Street flooding is occurring in parts of the City of Boulder. Motorists are urged to avoid driving through flooded areas.” Sam Sussman owns Eight Days a Week Imaging at 840 Pearl St. with his wife, Cheryl. They are no strangers to the sometimes-vicious whims of nature. Their family’s home on Sugarloaf Mountain was incinerated to its foundation in the Fourmile Fire. They now live in Eldorado Springs. “Cheryl went up to a friend’s house in Nederland Wednesday night, and she assured me she was going to leave there at 8:30,” Sam Sussman said. “She didn’t leave until a little after 9, and narrowly made it down the canyon. “I said, ‘Do you girls ever listen to the (expletive) news?’ “She said, ‘No.’” Meanwhile, after two-plus days of steady rain, CU officials could see they were looking at a rapidly deteriorating situation. Louise Vale, vice chancellor for administration, said emergency staff members were called in at 8 p.m. “I was talking with communications, I was talking with the police department and the facilities management crew about how bad it was, what were they were seeing, and were they going to be able to keep up,” she said. The university sent out its first campuswide text alert at 8:42 p.m., advising of a flash-flood warning in effect for the next two hours, and telling recipients to move to upper levels or higher ground on foot — as well as to avoid driving or crossing Boulder Creek. PAGE 5


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Main story There were widespread reports of students playing “slip and slide” on Farrand Field and tubing in tunnels on campus. At 9:20 p.m., a flash-flood warning was in effect for Boulder and parts of Boulder County until 10:45 p.m., with continuing rain expected. The city of Boulder, at 10:01 p.m., activated flood sirens near Boulder Creek, urging anyone near the waterway to seek higher ground immediately. Don’t try to cross the creek by any means, people were told. It was shortly after 10 p.m. that CU launched its first wave of evacuations, with door-to-door notices by family housing managers and campus police at Faculty-Staff Court, Athens Court and the first floors of Newton Court and Marine Street. A total of 381 were forced to temporarily relocate. “We already had a plan in place for people living there, which has been practiced — they know where they live and they are very much aware of the (flood) potential,” Vale said. “I can’t imagine any of those people would say they wouldn’t leave.” Boulder police officers now saw street flooding in the areas of 17th and 18th streets on University Hill, Baseline Road and Foothills Parkway, 28th Street underpasses, Ninth Street and Alpine Avenue, Manhattan Drive and Baseline. Rain was pounding the Fourmile Fire burn area. “The thing that was somewhat of a surprise to everyone was the set-up of the really, really, really, heavy, heavy, heavy, rain over the foothills,” said Glancy, of the National Weather Service. “Some areas were getting close to their annual rainfall in a three-day period. This was so far out of the ordinary. “This was an extremely rare event.” At 10:30 p.m., the National Weather Service updated the flash-flood warning, extending it to 12:45 a.m. Thursday. Wiyanna Nelson and Wesley Quinlan, both 19, were driving with two friends back to the city down Linden Drive from a birthday party in the hills northwest of Boulder shortly after 11 p.m. Raging water and mud surged around their Subaru. Stuck, three of the car’s occupants — Nelson and Quinlan, as well as Nathan Jennings — got out to seek help, while the fourth friend, Emily Briggs, stayed in the car. Nelson and Quinlan were overcome by the raging creek outside and killed as they were swept away. Briggs, who had stayed in the car, survived, as did Jennings. The situation was worsening in other parts of Boulder County, as well. Just before midnight, Longmont public works director Rademacher called Dominguez, the city manager, alerting him to the building danger of flooding in the city. Dominguez had been watching coverage of the weather on television. Soon after Rademacher called him, Dominguez brought emergency manager Dan Eamon into the conversation with a conference call. The decision was made to activate the city’s emergency operations center. “What we didn’t know (at the time), or fully appreciate, was the depth of this thing,” Rademacher told the Times-Call. Twitter and numerous other social media tools In Lyons, former Longmont Times-Call were utilized by The Daily Camera staff to photographer Greg Lindstrom was monitoring report on the !00-Year Flood. the area of the St. Vrain River bridge at U.S. 36. “You could hear debris in the water slamming into and rubbing against the bridge,” Lindstrom said. “For the next hour, it kept raining very hard, and you could see the water continue to rise. I remember being pretty worried about getting stuck where we were.” Just before midnight, a heavy mudslide in Fourmile Canyon rendered the road impassable at Colo. 119 and Gold Hill. There were several inches of water on the roadway. Across the foothills to the south, Gibson, the Four Mile Fire chief, was getting increasingly worried. Rain measurements had reached three-quarters of an inch per half-hour. In Jamestown, Little James Creek was quickly swelling into a rushing river five times its normal PAGE 6


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Main story width and many times its normal speed. From the mountains to the city streets, the words of Boulder City Manager Jane Brautigam best summarized the deteriorating situation: “It was all hands on deck.”

Thursday, Sept. 12: Quickly going from bad to worse Little James Creek began ripping buildings from their foundations and sending roofs plunging into basements. One of those buildings belonged to Joseph Howlett, 72, former owner of the Jamestown Mercantile. Howlett was believed to be crushed to death early Thursday when his home collapsed on him after it was pummeled by rushing waters for hours. His body was finally pulled from the rubble six days later. In north Boulder early Thursday, Alli Jones cursed to herself as she stood at the top of her stairs looking down to the first floor of her home on 17th Street across from Crest View Elementary. Water was flooding her first floor. Earlier, Jones had heard the emergency bulletins. Her first plan had been — denial. She had retreated to the second floor to do some work. But by 1 a.m., she figured she’d better take a look downstairs. “I thought, ‘What am I supposed to do? Am I supposed to turn the power off? Am I supposed to leave the lights on?’ I thought, ‘If I stand in the water, will I get electrocuted?’” Soon, she was outside, aided by a family friend, digging trenches around the house. The dark was animated by dozens of teenagers and their parents, some equipped with headlamps, sandbagging, digging, rushing in a frenzy to stem the same floodwaters that were wreaking havoc on their neighborhood school. In Longmont, just after 1 a.m., police began knocking on doors at the Royal Mobile Home Park near the St. Vrain River, warning people to get out. “That one was probably the one we were most concerned about,” said Longmont emergency manager Dan Eamon. In the foothills, emergency workers set up roadblocks in Fourmile Canyon, sent out notifications to residents and began communicating with Print provided news highlights of the previous Office of Emergency Management personnel day’s events. Delivery of our printed product, in Boulder about what they were seeing due to flooding and road damage, was around them. restricted. The Daily Camera broke all stories “Because anything that falls in the mountains on the web and made our e-edition freely ends up in the city,” Gibson said. available to the public. In the city, Boulder Creek was, by 1:13 a.m., roaring at a rate of 3,104 cubic feet per second, according to Boulder police Chief Mark Beckner. Two days before, it had been flowing at a leisurely 54 cfs. At 1:40 a.m., CU officials issued a text alert ordering faculty and staff residents living in university housing near Boulder Creek to evacuate. Soon, CU and the Boulder Valley School District would PAGE 7


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Main story both announce they were closing down. An evacuation order in the North St. Vrain Canyon in Lyons forced residents from their homes about 2:30 a.m. Among those doing so were Gerald Boland and his wife, Cheron, who set out for a friend’s home in Hygiene. Gerald Boland, 80, never got there. At some point, Boland turned his car around, stopping at Lyons Elementary. He had taught there for 30 years. The school was now an evacuation shelter. He was one of the first to arrive, turning on the lights for the stream of evacuees who soon would be arriving. It’s not known when he left the school, but he was not spotted again. Boland’s badly battered truck would be discovered about 200 yards downstream from his home, and his body was finally recovered a week later in the St. Vrain River bed. About the time that the Bolands evacuated from their home, Longmont activated its Emergency Operations Center. “What we didn’t know (at the time), or fully appreciate, was the depth of this thing,” said public works director Rademacher. The center was up and running by 2:30 a.m. Daylight brought a brief respite in the rainfall in Fourmile Canyon, enough for Gibson and his crew to take stock of the damage wrought to roads and infrastructure overnight. “We had significant road cuts, we had very high streamflows, and access to the canyon was threatened or completely cut off,” he said. Gibson put out a call to Longmont search-and-rescue crews for some help in making contact with residents, some of whom were trapped behind walls of mud or isolated by gutted roads. It was to no avail. “When we called on them, they were already deployed for search-and-rescue operations in Hygiene and Lyons,” he said. About 5 a.m., Sheriff Joe Pelle asked that people stay off the roads in Boulder County that day: Many intersections were impassable, and crews needed access The Daily Camera reported web first on a constant 24-hour without traffic to respond to urgent calls. news cycle during coverage of the 100-Year Flood. Initial And the rain wouldn’t stop. A tweets on our website, stories and posts were continually firefighter trapped in a tree in Lefthand updated as news broke. Canyon — where he spent much of the day, barely surviving — reported a 15- to 20-foot “wall of water” surging through the canyon. Up at the Cal-Wood Center near Jamestown, Burgert, the fifth-grade teacher, woke at 5:45 a.m. Going to the shower, she heard camp Executive Director Rafael Salgado on a two-way radio. “I heard him saying, ‘We need to figure out how to notify the principal and the school district,’ and I didn’t hear much else after that,” she said. “I thought, ‘Somebody’s hurt.’ The blood rushed out of me. I was actually relieved to find out what the reason was, because I had no idea what the situation was” down in the city. The situation virtually everywhere was quickly going from bad to worse. Leyla Jacobs ventured from her Jamestown home Thursday morning and headed toward town with her son when they saw that Little James Creek was now a turgid river. “My 17-year-old son said, ‘This is like Armageddon,’” she said. “We saw propane tanks that were just shooting down the river.” In Hygiene, a widening St. Vrain River hit the town and mixed with the water in the ponds at Pella Crossing, causing massive flooding along 75th Street. Picking up water from gravel ponds PAGE 8


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Photo by Paul Aiken / The Daily Camera From left to right Dan Feldheim, Scott Hoffenberg and John Smart pass sandbags as residents reinforce the dam on 7th Street on University Hill in Boulder, Colorado on Sunday September 15, 2013. Rain fell heavily again today increasing fears of more flooding in the community. between Hygiene and Longmont, flooding was now headed straight for the neighborhoods east of Airport Road between Ninth and Mountain View avenues. To the west, Lyons was completely isolated by floodwaters. “I knew a dam had breached above Lyons,” said Lindstrom, the photographer in that town. “I remember being kind of freaked out.” Boulder County Sheriff Joe Pelle said at a media briefing: “This is not your ordinary day. It is not your ordinary disaster.” And, he cautioned, “This event is not over. It’s far from over. It’s continuing to build.” “I was advising people the initial peak was going to hit the city at 8 in the morning,” Longmont’s Rademacher said. But 8 a.m. came and the water in his city, too, was still rising. The NWS forecast, issued for Denver/Boulder at 9:41 a.m. Thursday, underscored Pelle’s words. It read, in part, “NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER/BOULDER CO ... 941 AM MDT THU SEP 12 2013/ UPDATE/MAJOR FLOODING/FLASH FLOODING EVENT UNDERWAY AT THIS TIME WITH BIBLICAL RAINFALL AMOUNTS REPORTED IN MANY AREAS IN/ NEAR THE FOOTHILLS — THINGS ARE NOT LOOKING GOOD.” “I’ve been here since 1989, and this was the most significant widespread heavy precipitation I have seen,” said meteorologist Glancy. Just before 11 a.m., CU extended the closure of the Boulder campus through Friday, calling the weather in a text alert “unpredictable.” Saturday’s home football game versus Fresno State now was in jeopardy. It would be the first game cancellation since 9/11, the second since the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Sussman, at his shop at Ninth and Pearl streets, recalled that about 11 a.m., “Someone at the St. Julien Hotel said, ‘We’re evacuating the spa, and there was a wall of water coming down Boulder Canyon.’ We listened to the rumor and sent all the employees home — and then we realized, we’d sent everybody home on a rumor.” A large surge of water was reported by the Office of Emergency Management at 11:30 a.m. at Logan Mill in Fourmile Creek, exploding from 100 cubic feet per second to 1,000 cfs. Residents downstream were advised to climb to higher ground. Evacuation centers began opening for Boulder, Longmont, Jamestown, Lyons and Nederland. Gurpreet Gill, a three-year resident of Salina, a town at the junction of Fourmile Canyon and Gold Run Road, had spent the early hours of Thursday placing sandbags around her home and PAGE 9


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Main story listening to boulders crashing down the creek. By afternoon, her only escape from her property was about to get swept away. “My bridge had washed out, and my shed had fallen in,” she said. Gill moved her car closer to her home once water had reached the top of the tires and then went to a friend’s house to discuss what to do next. “We sat there watching this massive wall of water coming down,” she said. “We saw a car, we saw a boat, we saw a propane tank.” Gill decided to move to higher ground — her next-door neighbors’ house — where she monitored Triumphant stories of survival, tragic loss of life and human compassion were included in The Daily Camera’s coverage of Boulder County’s 100-Year Flood.

rising water levels using her car as a giant measuring stick. The Camera tweeted word at 3:23 p.m. from the U.S. Geological Survey that the storm now qualified as what most refer to as a 100-year flood, although that agency no longer uses that terminology. That determination was based on a creek flow of 4,500 cfs Thursday morning on Boulder Creek at North 75th Street. Flooding issues by now had caused so many problems at the Longmont wastewater treatment plant that it was shut down and evacuated. At the NWS data collection point near the National Institute of Standards and Technology, as of 6 p.m. it showed a staggering 9.08 inches of rain had fallen since 6 p.m. Wednesday. It was the highest one-day total on record for Boulder, swamping the previous record of 4.80 inches on July 31, 1919. Boulder police found themselves no longer able to respond to burglar alarms, harassment calls, traffic accidents and the other routine calls that typically make up the day. “We got information that Four Mile Creek was flooding north Boulder, Boulder Creek was flooding central Boulder, and that Gregory Canyon was flooding parts of the Hill,” Beckner said. “We were scratching our heads over that one, because we had never planned for flooding that high up on the Hill.” Also, the chief said, “We were finding the flooding was worse than the data would indicate. What we were getting in the streets didn’t match what the charts told us should be happening.” The water surging down from the high country was a big problem. But it wasn’t the whole problem. “What we had always trained on and practiced on and talked about, was, ‘What if a cell sets up over Fourmile, or Boulder Creek, and dumps 6 inches of rain in an hour? Here’s what to expect,’” Beckner said. “But the scenario we had was that the whole region was getting dumped on.” As the night wore on, a Colorado Department of Transportation staffer tried to head up Boulder Canyon but was unable to get anywhere. The second reported mudslide of the night, near the mouth of the canyon, blocked any westward progress. Police were getting reports that floodwater was redirecting out of Boulder Creek. Now, it was rushing down Canyon Boulevard. “We had a river on the north side of the creek. It looked like rapids were running across Central Park,” Beckner said. Arapahoe Road at 55th Street was under water. So was Foothills Highway at Baseline, and Table Mesa Drive, too. Police could no longer man every compromised intersection, and many had to PAGE 10


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Main story be abandoned in order to handle the truly urgent calls. “We just had to depend on the barricades and cones to do the job, and hoped people had the common sense not to drive through the water,” Beckner said. At 10:15 p.m., an emergency announcement was broadcast downtown that the section of the city from the mouth of Boulder Canyon east to Broadway, and from Marine Street north to Pearl Street, was now being ordered to evacuate. Some residents would hear it clearly, others would hear it as unintelligible garble. Beckner later said he didn’t know how many people actually did evacuate — and would likely never know. “What are you going to do?” asked the chief. “We called for an evacuation, but mandatory? You’re not going to arrest people who don’t leave. We were telling people to evacuate. But if you don’t listen to us, at least we told you.” Boulder police average 318 calls for service each day. On Thursday, there were 532. The department on a typical day receives 546 phone calls. On Thursday, there were 2,955. As midnight drew close, Beckner hopped in a Boulder police Ford Explorer with Deputy Police Chief Greg Testa and Deputy Fire Chief Mike Calderazzo. Through streets filled with water and nearly devoid of traffic, they toured some of the city’s more critically affected areas. “Even having had the reports from the field, once I saw with my own eyes what was going on, I was amazed at the amount of water coming down through the western Hill neighborhoods,” Beckner said. At Ninth and Arapahoe, “We sat there watching. We had waterfalls coming off people’s yards, falling off people’s yards, into the streets.” Meanwhile in Salina, Gill had moved with neighbors Michelle Wieber and Eric Stevens and their two sons to a guesthouse a little farther up the hill from the couple’s home. Another couple, Michelle Grainger and Steve Le Goff, joined them for the night. Gill, equipped with a flashlight, kept watch on the rising water as her neighbors tried to settle down for a fitful night of sleep while Mother Nature raged outside. As she returned from a quick trip to the bathroom outside, she heard a sound unlike anything else she had heard all day. “What could that be?” she said, as she hurried back inside.

Friday, Sept. 13: ‘The mud kept sucking him down’ A wall of mud had slid down the hillside behind them, smashing through the back of the house and burying Stevens and Wieber. Wieber managed to pull herself out from the muck, but Stevens was stuck, both of his legs cemented in the mud. It was 1 a.m. For the next 21/2 hours, life would be “sheer hell,” Gill said, as she and her three neighbors desperately tried to extract Stevens from the mud that engulfed him. They used spatulas and bowls from Gill’s kitchen to try to move the mud to free him. They also used their hands, scraping their fingers raw in the process. “The mud kept sucking him down as we were digging,” Gill said. “And all the while, there’s a fear the house could collapse on us.” Gill called 911 but was told there was no way anyone could get to where they were. She was finally able to get through to a neighbor on the phone. With three additional men digging at the mud pile surrounding Stevens, they got him free. PAGE 11


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Main story It was 3:30 a.m. Throughout Fourmile Canyon, the infrastructure was degrading along with the conditions. Gibson, the Four Mile fire chief, said he had men stationed throughout his district, watching drainages and roads, but they were unable to make progress rescuing residents while the rain fell in by the buckets and the creek roared out of control. “We don’t float better than the average civilian,” he said. Also unable to move as well that Friday morning was Rod Mohney, who was trying to reach his girlfriend’s house across Little James Creek from his rented cabin. A mudslide had draped itself across Main Street, blocking his way. “I was 100 yards away from her, but I couldn’t reach her,” the 51-year-old roofer said. The Daily Camera staff took thousands of photographs while reporting on Boulder County’s 100-Year Flood. To view a gallery of those images

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Returning to his cabin about 1 a.m., Mohney realized he didn’t have much time left before the water would be up to his doorstep. He packed his guns, some clothes and headed for higher ground. Within hours, the creek had unhinged his cabin from its foundation and tipped it on its side. Mohney managed to find what little humor he could in the moment. “I always wanted my cabin closer to the creek, but I didn’t want it that close,” he said. Up the hill from Mohney at Cal-Wood, a gray dawn heralded a grave situation for the elementary schoolkids trapped there. They were told that road conditions had degraded so badly the only way out would be by helicopter— but that it likely wouldn’t happen until Saturday. “That’s when there were some tears,” Burgert recalled. “But the other kids did such a beautiful job of consoling. The other kids really got it, and one of the parents really pointed out that people deal with different things in different ways, and kids really took that on and embraced it.” By Friday morning, Beckner implemented a decision he’d arrived at late the previous night: Officers were assigned on 12-hour shifts. The department hadn’t been forced to do that since riots rocked the Hill neighborhood in 1997. On the campus at CU, where an emergency services policy group had been gathering three times a day to update the situation, the midday meeting — with some of the dozen or so participants “attending” by phone because they couldn’t get there — was focused in part on the day ahead. Some 30,000 people or more were expected to show up for the football game. Playing the game with limited or no attendance, playing the game elsewhere or postponing it were all on the table, said Vale, the vice chancellor for administration. “We always look at safety first,” Vale said. “The other piece was whether we would have law enforcement at that game. We knew at that point we weren’t going to be able to provide security for people coming to the game. And by Friday, we thought we couldn’t really predict when it was going to stop raining.” Additionally, Boulder had become increasingly isolated by a seemingly endless wave of road and highway closures. CU police tweeted out from their account at 12:13 p.m. that the game with Fresno State was off, because of logistical challenges from the Boulder flood. The campus, too, would remain closed. Later in the afternoon, Sussman went from his downtown Boulder business back to the home on Eldorado Springs Drive that he and his wife bought with insurance money after losing everything but their cars and the clothes on their backs in the Fourmile Fire. “It’s raining like a (expletive), and there’s just a deluge of water,” Sussman said. “The community PAGE 12


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Mark Leffingwell / The Daily Camera SFC Keith Bart helps a woman who was winched up to a helicopter outside Jamestown Colorado that was cut off due to flooding. The aircraft was flown by members of 2-4 GSAB 4th Infantry Division based in Ft. Carson. ditch broke, and water is just pouring through our property. By 6, the water is up to the door.” However, he said, “There wasn’t really a sense of panic. Where, with a fire, you get burned if you don’t leave, the water just wasn’t high enough to be panicked about.” A lot of people across the region by now were in the same situation. Not all of them, like Sussman, had quintuple bypass surgery just a few months ago. “The neighbors (Steve Johnston, along with sons Ben and Nick) helped me, digging holes, moving big timbers, cutting fences and redirecting water to stabilize the situation. They were the cavalry, and Steve was the head of the cavalry.” Up in Salina, Gill found herself resting her aching limbs at the home she and her neighbor friends had hiked to from the mud-filled horror scene they had experienced that morning. She remembers toweling off her cat, herself, and then resting for the first time in as long as she could remember. “I just lay down on the ground and I was filled with a sense of, ‘Are you kidding me?’” she said. “’Did that just happen?’” A few hours later, Gill was on the move again, hiking up to Melvina Hill with search-and-rescue personnel and then being driven over to Monument Hill, where she was led on to a Black Hawk helicopter and flown to Boulder Municipal Airport. The National Guard started pulling people out of Jamestown in the afternoon. About a half-dozen flights also lifted off out of Salina on Friday afternoon, Gibson said, with the old, the injured and the exhausted getting first seats on the choppers. He had teams of rescuers trying to find anyone who needed help. And those they didn’t find, he was poised to find the next day. “They stayed in place so that at first light they could start operations again,” Gibson said.

Saturday, Sept. 14: Largest U.S. airlift since Katrina The weather broke Saturday. And while the day would turn out to be a big improvement over Friday, the chaos hadn’t quite played itself out yet. About 1 a.m., Sussman learned that residents of Eldorado Springs were under an evacuation order. “But we looked outside and it was calm. There was no rushing water,” Sussman said. “So we went back to bed.” Later that morning, the Sussmans had another experience that was quickly becoming PAGE 13


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Main story commonplace throughout the county. They looked in their crawlspace and saw what their neighbor estimated to be 20,000 gallons of water. They did not have flood insurance. About 9 a.m., the first Lyons-to-Longmont convoy reached the Colo. 66 barricade at 75th Street. Evacuees were shuttled to LifeBridge Christian Church. “There was a pretty much audible sigh,” said the Rev. Drew Depler. “But people are weathering it. They’ve been through a lot by now.” Back in Jamestown, the Cal-Wood group had been notified that the children should be readied in groups of 20 for loading onto helicopters. At 11 a.m., the first chopper appeared. “The guy said, ‘Give me 28 people.’ They were early, and I had not made groups of 28. We had made groups of 20,” Burgert said. “He said, ‘Hurry, give us as many as you can; our fuel is precious.’ ... Some of the kids got on Black Hawks with their parents, and most of us were on Chinooks. I ended going out with the last kids on the fourth group.” The skies over western Boulder County were alive on the first sunny morning in five days, as the National Guard mounted an airlift operation from Boulder Municipal Airport. Lt. Mitch Utterback believed it to be the largest undertaken on U.S. soil since Hurricane Katrina. By the end of the day, the total evacuated from the battered mountain communities would reach more than 1,200, including some 500 who were driven out of Lyons, one of the most heavily damaged towns. “It is the most unbelievable thing I’ve ever seen,” said Sally Van Meter, who lives on a hill just outside downtown Lyons. When the Cal-Wood crew started landing in waves of choppers at the city’s airport, there was exultation. “We landed and there was a line of emergency personnel, firefighter-type people, all in their gear, and they were slapping hands with the kids as they walked toward the terminal,” Burgert said. Fourmile Canyon saw great progress Saturday. Search-and-rescue crews had surveyed every structure in the area, Gibson said. They may not have reached every front door, but they had laid eyes on every home. “By the end of light Saturday, we had done a primary search of Sunshine, Fourmile and Gold Hill districts,” he said. They also had begun to get a sense of the scope of the destruction in their midst. Gibson said his crew documented numerous damaged and destroyed buildings and roads that had simply disappeared under water or a debris field. Gold Run Road got the worst of it, he said. “There was a canyon where the road used to be,” Gibson said Late Saturday night, Longmont’s Public Works and Natural Resources Department, working with the Army Corps of Engineers, cut a ditch redirecting water that had been pouring into Longmont neighborhoods near Airport Road back into the St. Vrain River channel.

Sunday, Sept. 15: A final downpour — and frustration Sunday morning started out looking as foreboding as the six days preceding, with the city of Boulder again on a flash-flood watch extending to 6 p.m. PAGE 14


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Main story Sample of Daily Camera staff reporter Charlie Brennan’s Twitter posts

At 5:35 a.m., the Colorado Office of Emergency Management announced that late the previous night, President Barack Obama had issued a disaster declaration for Boulder County, ordering federal aid for county residents, to complement state and local recovery efforts in the area affected by severe storms, flooding, landslides and mudslides. Within a few days, more than 7,600 county residents would be applying for assistance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency. The rain returned by mid-morning Sunday, and soon it was coming down once again in sheets, grounding rescue helicopters and pushing area homeowners to the brink. Rain persisted well into the afternoon before it finally relented. Sheriff Pelle didn’t sugarcoat things as the cloud cover again dropped low over the foothills. “The major thing we’re dealing with is frustration — frustration that we can’t fly,” he said. “Eighty percent of what we are trying to accomplish can only be done by air, and pilots and crews are sitting on their hands.” Gibson, the fire chief, said rescues out of Fourmile Canyon continued Sunday, but by ground rather than air. “We were hampered by a lack of aircraft,” he said. “We had to hike out more people than we wanted. We felt that come Monday, we would keep the operation going so that everyone who wanted to get out, needed to get out, got out.” Frustration prevailed for the Boulder Valley School District, with transportation and structural worries triggering the announcement that schools would remain closed Monday and Tuesday. CU, however, made official its decision late Sunday afternoon to reopen Monday for classes and normal business operations, signaling a return to something like normalcy for the state’s flagship university. As the day wound down, so did the rainfall, stopping by late afternoon, bringing a sense of relief that, however bad it was, it shouldn’t get any worse.

Long road to recovery It would rain just a bit more Monday morning, bringing Boulder’s precipitation total for the year so far to 30.14 inches, topping the city’s record for an entire year, which had been 29.93 inches in 1995. From Sept. 9 through Sept. 16, the storm dropped 17.15 inches of rain on Boulder. With the rain’s end, the long road to recovery began. Sussman, whose family has endured both cataclysmic fire and ravaging rain in the past three years, said, “I’ve learned if you’re gonna be in a disaster, you want to be in Boulder, Colorado, because you find out that people here are actually nice.” Miraculously, Boulder would learn that no one in the city limits was killed. In Longmont, too, no lives were lost. Beckner was asked, if the city survived this, could it survive anything? “I wouldn’t ever say that,” he said. But countywide the damage was considerable, and in some locations staggering. Communities such as Salina, Jamestown and Lyons are projecting a comeback will takes months — at least — and some neighborhoods in Longmont, too, face long roads to recovery Russ Schumacher, an assistant professor in the atmospheric science department at Colorado State University, calculated that the rain the city of Boulder experienced has a less than 1-in1,000 chance of happening in any year. That, he acknowledged, would translate to what would

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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Main story Sample of Daily Camera tweets and re-tweets from staff reporters

Sample of Daily Camera business reporter Alicia Wallace’s Twitter posts

commonly be termed a 1,000-year rain event. “Based on what we know about the rainfall, and since we have all the rainfall data, essentially that is a straightforward call, to find that the chance of this amount of rain occurring in this area is probably less than one in 1,000 in any given year,” Schumacher said. Glancy, at the National Weather Service, said analysis of this storm will continue for a long time to come, but he is already comfortable saying it exceeded Boulder’s flood of May 1969 — the previous largest flood most people living here can recall. “This is one for the record books,” Glancy said. “There already has been discussion whether this was a 100- or 1,000year event ... we know it is somewhere in excess of a 100-year flood.” Boulder County, battered and more than a little bruised, had withstood perhaps the greatest storm many of its residents will ever see — the kind of storm they’d been warned of for decades. Boulder Mayor Matt Appelbaum summed it up this way: “We will learn from this. And we will be better.”

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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Twitter

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witter is a tool the Daily Camera has used for several years now as an essential means of keeping readers and the community apprised of local news as it happens. During the flood, it was a critical tool as many in our area lost power to home computers and television, were evacuated from their homes, or simply wanted up-to-the-minute updates of the flooding as it unfolded. Throughout the storm, we tweeted using the Camera’s official Twitter account (@dailycamera), samples of which are laced in our day-by-day entries. But we also relied on our reporting and photo staff to tweet from their personal accounts. Below is a very tiny sampling of the scores and scores of tweets by staffer Mitchell Byars (@MitchellByars) as an example of the exceptional work our news staff executed via Twitter and other social media. Mitchell’s Twitter feed, as well as the Camera’s main Twitter feed, became for thousands in our community and across the nation – as well as for media in the Denver metro area – the go-to Twitter feeds to follow for the most current news about the flood, alerts, warnings, evacuations, rescues, twists in the weather and just about anything one needed or wanted to know.

Daily Camera reporter Mitchell Byars Twitter reporting beginning 12 a.m., September 12, 2013

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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Photography

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oulder authorities tweeted at 9:21 p.m. September 11 warning residents to move to higher ground. Within 30 minutes of that tweet, Boulder Daily Camera’s staff of four photographers began rushing into rising waters documenting what would be weeks of around-the-clock photo coverage of this historic 100-year flood. Staff photos and video of the 100-year flood began posting to the Daily Camera web site within one hour of the 9:21 p.m. warning. Photo editor Paul Aiken, recovering from open-heart surgery the previous month, immediately began documenting average citizens swinging into action saving neighbors from darkened flooding apartments. Navigating surging rivers where city streets once existed, Aiken filed photos and video back to the Daily Camera website being updated minute-by-minute with breaking staff and social media coverage. At first light the scope of the flood transformed into a national news story and Boulder became the epicenter of a federal emergency declared by President Obama. Staff photographer Jeremy Papasso hiked miles into areas shut off from road collapses capturing stunning imagery and video of people being saved. His iconic images of Suzanne Sophocles being saved by a swiftwater rescue team and Brighton Fire Rescue firefighter Clint Mader searching for flood victims bodies would become part of The Daily Camera’s photo report viewed around the world. Papasso’s image of Sean McCroskey standing in front of his destroyed home pulling his wife’s jacket out of the debris, where the home once stood, would capture the shear force created by walls of water tumbling vehicle-sized boulders through Boulder County mountain communities. Funerals would follow. Families of two teenage flood victims would allow photographer Cliff Grassmick to document a community memorial service in memory of Wesley Quinlan and his girlfriend Wiyanna Nelson who were traveling back from a birthday party when their vehicle was inundated by a wall of flood waters. Grassmick would also evacuate his family while covering the flood.

CLICK HERE TO VIEW BREAKING NEWS PHOTOGRAPHY GALLERY

Photo by Jeremy Papasso / The Daily Camera The Summit County Rescue team works to save Suzanne Sophocles, at center, from her severely flooding home on Friday, Sept. 13, on Streamcrest Drive in Boulder.

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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Photography

Photo by Mark Leffingwell / The Daily Camera A rescue helicopter flies over Jamestown Colorado which was hard hit by flood waters. The aircraft was flown by the 2-4 GSAB 4th Infantry Division based in Ft. Carson, Colorado. September 17, 2013.

Photo by Cliff Grassmick / The Daily Camera Mourners comfort each other after the memorial service for flood victims Wiyanna Nelson and Wesley Quinlan on Saturday, Sept. 21.

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Photo by Paul Aiken / The Daily Camera From left, Dan Feldheim, Scott Hoffenberg and John Smart pass sandbags to reinforce the dam on Seventh Street on University Hill in Boulder on Sunday, Sept. 15, when rain fell heavily again and increased fears of more flooding in the community.

Photo by Mark Leffingwell / The Daily Camera Two women smile and laugh after rescued by a helicopter crew with the 2-4 GSAB 4th Infantry Division based in Ft. Carson near Jamestown, Colorado September 17, 2013. PAGE 3


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Photography

Photo by Paul Aiken / The Daily Camera U.S. Postal Service letter carrier Mike Posniewsky looks to deliver mail across a washed out Topaz Drive in Boulder on Saturday Sept. 14. He ultimately scrambled across the debris and made the delivery.

Photo by Jeremy Papasso / The Daily Camera Brighton Fire Rescue firefighter Clint Mader searches for a possible drowning victim along Linden Avenue in Boulder during the heavy flooding on Thursday, Sept. 12. Two teenage victims were found nearby. PAGE 4


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Photo by Mark Leffingwell / The Daily Camera Jack Templeton stands in knee-deep water while trying to access his storage facility in Boulder after it was flooded by heavy rains on Thursday, Sept. 12.

Photo by Paul Aiken / The Daily Camera Dag Larson, right, helps Alek Stefanov gather his belonging from his flooded apartment in the Aspen Grove Apartments off Kalmia Avenue in north Boulder on Thursday morning, Sept. 12. Larson and a friend woke Stefanov from a sound sleep as water poured into his apartment. PAGE 5


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Photography

Photo by Mark Leffingwell / The Daily Camera Birdie Reznickek, right, passes flood-damaged wood to neighbor Kate McCarthy, 11, as they work to clean up McCarthy’s flooded home on Qualla Drive in Boulder on Saturday, Sept. 14.

Photo by Mark Leffingwell / The Daily Camera SFC Keith Bart helps a woman who was winched up to a helicopter outside Jamestown Colorado that was cut off due to flooding. The aircraft was flown by members of 2-4 GSAB 4th Infantry Division based in Ft. Carson. Colorado September 17, 2013. PAGE 6


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Photo by Jeremy Papasso / The Daily Camera Sean McCroskey pulls his wife Meg’s jacket out of the debris in the river on Thursday, Sept. 19, in front of their destroyed home on Gold Run Road in Boulder County.

Photo by Jeremy Papasso / The Daily Camera Kyle Schuler, left, carries his pregnant sister with the help of their father, Kim,, after gathering belongings from their flooded home on Upland Avenue in Boulder on Friday, Sept. 13.

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Photo by Jeremy Papasso / The Daily Camera Donate Boulder volunteers Addy Sage, at right, and Theo Merrin work to remove mud and sand from a home in Jamestown on Saturday, Sept. 28.

Photo by Cliff Grassmick / The Daily Camera Carlos Duron, 3, plays on a cot, while his mother, Vilma Maldonado, talks on the phone in Mead, Colorado on September 15, 2013. Both flood evacuees were staying at Mead High School set up by the Red Cross.

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Photo by Cliff Grassmick / The Daily Camera Ron Quinlan, father of flood victim Wesley Quinlan, hugs Tami Warman before the memorial service Saturday September 21, for the two teenage who were killed in the flood waters in Boulder. The portrait of Wiyanna Nelson, who was with Quinlan when their car was engulfed in rushing water is seen in the background.

Photo by Jeremy Papasso / The Daily Camera A woman, who asked not to be identified, carries two children while being evacuated by the Juniper Valley Fire Crew on Saturday, Sept. 14, on Olde Stage Road in Boulder.

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Photo by Jeremy Papasso / The Daily Camera Salina resident Gurpreet Gill walks thru the debris in a home that was hit by a mudslide that trapped her and others on Thursday, Oct. 3, in Salina.

Photo by Jeremy Papasso / The Daily Camera Evacuees hurry across the tarmac after being rescued by helicopter from the Pinewood Springs area on Monday, Sept. 16, at the Boulder Municipal Airport in Boulder. PAGE 10


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Video

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t the Daily Camera, we have four photographers who also produce the lion’s share of our video. The Camera – which produces video with many of our daily and longer-term stories, as well as video projects and video for our three niche websites – also has been a leader and innovator in news video among newspapers for more than a decade. So it is no surprise that video was a cornerstone of our coverage of the September 2013 flood. Here we have provided a compilation of just 20 or so of the scores of videos our photo/news team produced during the flood. It includes short-form videos – many of which we not only presented on our stories online, but also promoted using social media start-up Tout – along with more polished, longer-form storytelling videos toward the end of the compilation. Coverage within this compilation ranges from some of the earliest video captured during the flood – showing innocent college students playing in the rising waters and neighbors alerting neighbors of the flooding and need to evacuate – to footage of residents surveying the damage and recounting their stories of survival, to emergency workers and officials discussing the disaster.

CLICK HERE FOR VIDEO COMPILATION OF 100-YEAR FLOOD


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Social Media

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he Daily Camera long has been exceptionally active with social media tools such as Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Instagram and others, as well as an innovator in incorporating social media curation applications such as Storify and liveblogging tools, including ScribbleLive. Incorporating them in our coverage of the September 2013 flood was no exception. In a separate element of our entry you will find a sampling of our coverage via Twitter. Here, we offer just a small sampling of our extensive use of Facebook to keep our readers, followers and the community informed. Additionally, within two hours of the first evacuation orders, our features reporter Aimee Heckel began curation efforts on behalf of the Daily Camera – work she would continue long after the days of rain ended – using one Storify to curate tweets about the flooding and another to compile curated photos of the flooding. Additionally, she used Scribblelive to provide a curated liveblog of the crisis.

The Daily Camera’s breaking news reporting of 100-Year Flood via live blog, Twitter, Facebook, ScribbleLive, Storify and Instagram curation

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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Day One Coverage

Photo by Mark Leffingwell / The Daily Camera Jack Templeton stands in knee deep water trying to access the storage facility after flooding from heavy rains has washed it out in Boulder, Colorado September 12, 2013. POSTED TO DAILYCAMERA.COM 09/12/2013 04:54:28 AM MDT

Boulder registers wettest 24-hour period, and month, on record Devastating downpour now ranks as a 100-year flood

By Charlie Brennan and Elizabeth Mattern Clark, Camera Staff Writers

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oulder has set a record for its wettest 24-hour period. Ever. Prior to Wednesday, the single wettest day on record was July 31, 1919, when 4.80 inches of rain were recorded, according to Bob Henson, a science writer at the National Center for Atmospheric Research. Henson said that the latest official readings for Boulder show that from 6 p.m. Wednesday to 9:15 a.m. today, 7.21 inches of rain have fallen in Boulder, with amounts likely varying from a bit lower in northeast areas of the city to higher than that to the southwest. “We have never had anything this big,� said Boulder meteorologist Matt Kelsch. Additionally, the last three days of rain are more than Boulder has experienced in any month on record. PAGE 1


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Day One Coverage Since the rain kicked in late Monday afternoon, Boulder has officially recorded at least 9.61 inches of rain, topping the 9.59 inches recorded in the entire month of May 1995. But the numbers, in fact, go higher “There was 10.35 inches (since Monday evening) at my house in South Boulder, and I think over toward northwest Boulder, in the Holiday neighborhood, and some other areas, they are at 11 inches,” Kelsch said. “They had 8 1/2 inches just yesterday, north of Pearl St.” By late 4:30 p.m.Thursday, Kelsch said another 1.21 inches had brought the total at his south Boulder residence to 11.36 inches since the storm ended, and that since it was still raining, it might already be at 12 inches. By contrast, he said, downtown Lyons had received only 6.06 inches since Monday, but that the totals west of there were surely far higher. Kelsch added that reporting is not as thorough for areas such as Nederland and Allenspark, but that he believes totals for the storm in and around those mountain communities will be higher. This is also by far the rainiest September ever for the city. “Keeping in mind that Boulder records are a little bit spotty in places, but this is an extreme event for any month. But for the month of September, the heaviest rainfall (previously) was 3.05 inches, and that was Sept. 4, 1901,” Henson said. “So we may have doubled that record, and no other September day has received more than three inches. This is a one-day record (for any month).” In fact, Boulder’s one-day record has not just been broken; it has been shattered. After the 4.80 inch reading in 1919, all runners-up rounding out the Top 10 for a 24-hour-period are readings of 3.6 inches or less. Also, all of those feel between April and early August. So both in totals and timing, Henson

Additional coverage samples (links) on Thursday, Sept. 12 100-year-flood: Boulder rainfall records swamped in dueling weather systems: http://www. dailycamera.com/news/boulderflood/ci_24081189 ‘It’s like Noah’s Ark’: Sunshine Canyon residents survey flood damage near Boulder: http://www. dailycamera.com/news/boulderflood/ci_24079611 Homeless people turned away from Boulder flood shelter: http://www. dailycamera.com/news/boulderflood/ci_24078909 Flooding claims at least 2 lives in Boulder, Jamestown: http://www. dailycamera.com/news/boulderflood/ci_24084761 Flood damage leaves Boulder-area residents scrambling: http://www. dailycamera.com/news/boulderflood/ci_24083820

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Photo by Mark Leffingwell / The Daily Camera A man tries to untangle debris what washed down to his home after heavy rains caused severe flooding in Boulder, Colorado September 12, 2013. said, “This is an event that really stands apart.” Prior to the drenching of the past 24 hours, watchers in parts of Boulder had recorded up to 5 inches of rain through Tuesday. And it’s not over. National Weather Service meteorologist in charge Nezette Rydell said this morning, “Even though we are on the downside of this system, we could expect problems anywhere on the Front Range today, possibly even tonight, and start looking for improvement to begin on Friday.

Photo by Jeremy Papasso / The Daily Camera Brighton Fire Rescue firefighter Clint Mader searches for a possible drowning victim during the heavy flooding on Thursday in Boulder. Two teenage victims were found dead in the area. PAGE 3


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Day One Coverage The chance of rain is expected to drop — finally — to about 30 percent Friday night and Saturday, she said, before climbing back to 50-to-60 percent, Saturday night and Sunday. Preliminary readings show that Boulder Creek reached 3,100 cubic feet per second at Broadway on Wednesday night, according to Treste Huse, a hydrologist for the National Weather Service. And with more rain in the forecast tonight, “We’re definitely watching it because the soils will be saturated,” Huse said. “Water is already standing, and we have another risk of flash flooding, so we definitely are still concerned.” Boulder has long ranked as one of the state’s top flood hazards and made a national list of six “disasters waiting to happen” published by the University of Colorado in 2004, along with a devastating hurricane striking New Orleans. The most moisture Boulder had previously received on record in the month of September is 5.5 inches, in 1940, according to Camera weather historian Bill Callahan. The Big Thompson flood of 1976 was considered between a 500-year and 1,000-year event. The disaster between Estes Park and Loveland killed 145 people and caused $41 million in damage after dumping 12 inches of rain in three hours.

The Daily Camera staff tweeted all breaking news events throughout coverage of Boulder County’s 100-Year Flood. To read staff reporter Mitch Byars’ continuous breaking Twitter posts during the first hours of flooding, please see story 2. Below is a sample of Daily Camera staff reporter John Aguilar’s tweets:

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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Day Two Coverage

Photo by Jeremy Papasso / The Daily Camera Kyle Schuler, left, carries his pregnant sister with the help of his father, Kim Schuler, right, after gathering belongings from their flooded home on Upland Avenue in Boulder on Friday during the heavy flooding. POSTED TO DAILYCAMERA.COM 09/13/2013 07:42:52 AM MDT

181 ‘unaccounted for,’ at least 3 dead in Boulder County By Mitchell Byars, Erica Meltzer and Brittany Anas Camera Staff Writers

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ederal crews began a historic search and rescue effort Friday as 181 people in Boulder County remain “unaccounted for” following 100-year flooding from several days of torrential rainfall. Two Federal Emergency Management Agency teams joined the effort Friday. With 250 people, the largest federal search and rescue team ever for the state of Colorado is now tasked with scouring a flood-ravaged Boulder County. “This is an unprecedented event,” Sheriff Joe Pelle said. The death toll rose Friday to at least three after crews found a woman who had been missing since Thursday morning. Evacuations issued late Thursday for western central Boulder, Eldorado Springs and portions of Longmont remained in effect Friday night. The list of people who are “unaccounted for” — who can’t be reached by family and friends — has also grown from 20 on Thursday to 181, and Pelle said he expects the number to rise PAGE 1


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Day Two Coverage even more because most of the western part of the county is still inaccessible. “I expect that list to grow,” Pelle said. “The things that worry us are what we don’t know. We don’t know how many lives are lost, we don’t know about homes lost.” Emergency officials are keeping that list confidential for now. However, emergency officials Friday morning said every person on the list is an adult, and University of Colorado officials said no students are unaccounted for. Weather conditions improved enough for the National Guard to send helicopters into Jamestown to evacuate the town and drop off supplies. At the same time, residents of Lyons are also being evacuated into Longmont by high-clearance National Guard vehicles. ‘It’s not safe right now’ Many major highways have been re-opened, but other roads and highways — including Table Mesa Drive at Broadway — remain closed, and Boulder police spokeswoman Kim Kobel asked people to stay out of Boulder if possible and off the roads. Boulder Mayor Matt Appelbaum

Additional coverage samples (links) on Friday, Sept. 13 Rescue crews help Lefthand Canyon residents evacuate: http://www. dailycamera.com/news/boulderflood/ci_24093597 Evacuee: ‘The human spirit is alive and well in Jamestown’: http:// www.dailycamera.com/news/ boulder-flood/ci_24091356 In the mouth of Boulder Canyon: The aftermath of a 100-year flood: http://www.dailycamera.com/ news/boulder-flood/ci_24092891 Home repairs from Boulder flood damage won’t be cheap: http:// www.dailycamera.com/news/ boulder-flood/ci_24093565 Boulder residents survey flood damage: ‘Our house was almost on an island’: http://www.dailycamera. com/news/boulder-flood/ ci_24092645 East Boulder County emerges from a tough night of evacs, road closures: http://www.dailycamera. com/news/boulder-flood/ ci_24084740 PAGE 2

Photo by Paul Aiken / The Daily Camera Kent Shorrock and his wife Astrid Paustian with the help of Patrick Truman uses straw bales to keep water from their home in North Boulder of Violet Avenue Friday morning.


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Day Two Coverage

Photo by Cliff Grassmick / The Daily Camera Dave Naber, left, and Kelly Schultz, shovel out mud and water out of one of the Farmer’s Insurance offices on west Arapahoe on Friday.

Photo by Paul Aiken / The Daily Camera Greg Leon looks over an overturned car in Pine Brook Hills in Boulder on Friday September 13, 2013 signed an emergency declaration making it illegal for people to be on the city’s open space and mountain parks land. Kobel said flooding in those areas has made them dangerous. “There are lakes in Boulder where there weren’t lakes before,” Kobel said. “It’s not safe right now.” Police also said tubing, boating or kayaking in a disaster area is illegal. A break in a pipe of the wastewater treatment plant also resulted in a 300-foot breach of untreated sewage water to flow directly into Boulder Creek on Friday evening, though it has not affected Boulder’s drinking water. At the University of Colorado, about 355 residents were allowed to return to faculty and staff PAGE 3


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Day Two Coverage

Photo by Jeremy Papasso / The Daily Camera The Summit County Rescue team works to save Suzanne Sophocles, at center, from her severely flooding home on Friday, Sept. 13, on Streamcrest Drive in Boulder. housing units, Athens Court and the ground floor of Newton Court, after being evacuated Thursday. CU Chancellor Phil DiStefano announced Friday that today’s football game against Fresno State will be postponed. While Folsom Field is structurally OK, the university said it did not want to divert resources from relief efforts. The storm system has dumped a record-shattering 14.71 inches of water on the Boulder area since Monday. Average yearly precipitation is just under 21 inches.

Midnight scare, evacuations Late Thursday, a caller told dispatchers he had heard an “explosion” from the area of Emerson Gulch in Fourmile Canyon and saw the valley below him fill with water carrying debris, including cars. He estimated the wall of water to be about 30 feet high. Officials told residents to prepare for a surge and ordered evacuations from the mouth of Boulder Canyon east to Broadway, between Marine and Pearl streets. They were told to evacuate on foot to avoid getting trapped in their cars on streets that were running like rivers. Residents east of Broadway along the creek all the way to 75th Street were told to “shelter in place” but move to higher floors or higher ground if possible. A U.S. Geological Survey water gauge in Fourmile Creek recorded a 17-foot wall of water slightly before midnight, but the feared surge did not materialize, perhaps because the water spread out in the wider floor of Boulder Canyon.

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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Day Three Coverage

Photo by Jeremy Papasso / The Daily Camera A woman, who asked not to be identified, carries two children while being evacuated by the Juniper Valley Fire Crew on Saturday, Sept. 14, on Olde Stage Road in Boulder. POSTED TO DAILYCAMERA.COM 09/14/2013 10:20:32 AM MDT

234 remain ‘unaccounted for’, rescuers slowly gain ground Three confirmed dead, more fatalities anticipated By Mitchell Byars, Camera Staff Writer

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earch and rescue teams on Saturday took full advantage of a break in the torrential rain that has been hammering Boulder County as more than 1,200 people have been evacuated so far in the wake of a 100-year flood in what officials said may be the largest aerial rescue since Hurricane Katrina. With weather conditions improving , rescue teams were able to send helicopters into the mountain towns of western Boulder County as well as high-clearance vehicles into the town of Lyons to evacuate stranded residents. “It’s been an amazing day, an amazing 24 hours of saving lives,” Boulder Sheriff Joe Pelle said. About 500 people were driven out of Lyons, but many of the other rescues have been by helicopter as the National Guard staged an air rescue campaign from Boulder Municipal Airport. Lt. Col. Mitch Utterback with the National Guard said to his knowledge it is the largest aerial PAGE 1


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Day Three Coverage rescue since Hurricane Katrina in 2005. “There is no greater patriotic feeling than a helicopter taxiing down the runway and civilians coming out,” Utterback said. But amid the joy over the successful evacuations, officials as of 9 p.m. said 234 people remain unaccounted for — meaning their family or friends have not been able to make contact with them — and three people in the county have been killed. Officials cautioned that those 234 are not all missing, and that the number is speculative, since some people have been counted twice while entire families have only been tallied as one person. But while Pelle said he expects that number to drop as people are able to get back in touch with loved ones and more information starts coming in from evacuation centers, officials are expecting the current death toll of three in the county may rise. Pelle said crews have not yet been able to search collapsed buildings or mudslides, places where they would expect to find bodies. “I don’t want to be pessimistic, but I want to be realistic,” Pelle said. Coroner Emma Hall on Saturday evening released the identities of two of the three people killed by the flooding in Boulder County. Those victims were Wiyanna Nelson and Wesley Quinlan, both 19. The bodies of the two teens, who family members told the Denver Post were boyfriend and girlfriend, were recovered on Thursday on Linden Avenue, just west of Boulder. The couple and two friends were at a birthday party in the foothills west of town Wednesday night when the flooding began, and attempted to drive back down Linden when their car became stuck, according to family members. They got out of the vehicle and were caught in the rushing water. A cause and manner of death for the two has not been released. Hall has not yet identified the third victim claimed by the storm in Boulder County, but residents of Jamestown have said they believe it was former Jamestown Mercantile owner Joseph Howlett, 72. The Denver Post has reported that Howlett is believed to have been killed when his house collapsed in a mudslide

Additional coverage samples (links) on Saturday, Sept. 14 Fifth-graders stranded at Cal-Wood near Jamestown return to Louisville: http://www.dailycamera.com/news/ boulder-flood/ci_24096061 Boulder residents stock up on sump pumps, cleaning supplies, food: http:// www.dailycamera.com/news/boulderflood/ci_24095733 234 people remain unaccounted as rescuers gain ground: http://www. dailycamera.com/news/boulder-flood/ ci_24098263 Boulder County’s major reservoirs holding steady, despite week’s deluge: http://www.dailycamera.com/news/ boulder-flood/ci_24097033 Officials: Extensive road damage still being assessed: http://www. dailycamera.com/news/boulder-flood/ ci_24096305

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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Day Three Coverage

Photo by Jeremy Papasso / The Daily Camera Lefthand Canyon Drive is in ruins seen here on Saturday, Sept. 14, on Olde Stage Road in Boulder. on Wednesday night. Aerial evacuations of Jamestown began Friday morning once the weather cleared up enough for helicopters to take off. Pelle said about 160 people have been airlifted out of the town, though 50 have elected to stay behind. Pelle said deputies are going to make one last plea to those residents to evacuate. “We’re trying to tell them we may not be able to come back,” Pelle said. Just after noon Saturday, the Fireside Elementary students who were at the CalWood Education Center outside of Jamestown were safely airlifted out to Boulder Municipal Airport and transported to their school in Louisville, to be reunited with their families. Pelle said the coming days probably won’t yield the huge evacuation numbers as helicopters begin searching for lone residents trapped in various parts of the county, as opposed to evacuating entire communities. But he said they will continue to make as many trips as the weather allows. “If I was that one person, that helicopter would be just as important to me,” Pelle said. ‘Our normal has changed’ As the rains calmed, officials have begun floodwaters have caused around the county.

Photo by Mark Leffingwell / The Daily Camera Ground crew members assist a woman rescued from one the mountain towns from a National Guard helicopter at Boulder Municipal Airport in Boulder, Colorado September 14, 2013. Many small mountain towns are cut off from road access and people can only be brought out by air.

to get a better grasp of the type of damage the

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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Day Three Coverage Sample of Daily Camera staff reporter Joe Rubino’s tweets:

Officials said 100 to 150 miles of road have been destroyed along with 20 to 30 bridges. The estimated cost for the county to repair that infrastructure is currently estimated to be around $150 million. “It’s a huge deal,” Pelle said. I know people want to go back to normal. But our normal has changed.” In Boulder, officials lifted the evacuation orders issued for the western part of the city at the mouth of the Boulder Canyon just after 2 p.m., but it warned residents to be aware more rain could spark additional evacuation orders. University of Colorado police spokesman Ryan Huff said police had to stop a student who tried to go tubing in Boulder Creek. “This is not the time to be playing around,” Huff said. “This continues to be a dangerous situation.” Boulder Mayor Matt Appelbaum also said an emergency declaration making it illegal to be on city Open Space and Mountain Parks lands and trails remains in effect. Boulder City Manager Jane Brautigam also closed several city parks. Rangers are on duty, but the city is hoping for voluntary compliance so they can focus on assessing damage, not writing tickets. “People love their open space, I get it, but it’s dangerous,” Appelbaum said. “Places I’ve known and loved for 30 years are gone.” The University of Colorado said 70 of its building saw some sort of water damage, and officials were meeting over the weekend to determine if the campus can be opened on Monday. The Boulder Valley School District stated on its Facebook page that all schools will be open Monday, except Crest View Elementary, Nederland Middle/Senior High, and Nederland, Gold Hill, and Jamestown elementary schools. A district wide communication will be sent late today to confirm a Monday opening for the remainder of its schools, once the district evaluates the impact of possible additional rain this weekend.

Looting and scams CU police early Saturday arrested a man on suspicion of trespassing after he was found wandering the halls of the Ramaley Biology building with a backpack containing a laptop, cell phones and other items. Huff identified the man as 44-year-old Matthew Singer, a transient previously arrested on campus for burglary. Huff also said that a facilities management employee on Friday morning spotted a man matching the description of a suspect in a string a campus laptop thefts at the Gold Biosciences building, but the suspect could not be located when police arrived. Boulder police Chief Mark Beckner said police have not seen any looting incidents in the city. The Boulder County District Attorney’s Office also said people have been going door-to-door in some areas posing as Xcel Energy employees. The DA’s Office advised residents to be sure to check identification and run background check on any hired contractors for work on flood damage. Those who do wish to donate may do so at http://unitedwayfoothills.org/floodrelief. Officials said cash at this time is preferable to supply donations. Contact Camera Staff Writer Mitchell Byars at 303-473-1329 or byarsm@dailycamera.com. PAGE 4


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Day Four Coverage

Photo by Paul Aiken / The Daily Camera From left to right Dan Feldheim, Scott Hoffenberg and John Smart pass sandbags as residents reinforce the dam on 7th Street on University Hill in Boulder, Colorado on Sunday September 15, 2013. Rain fell heavily again today increasing fears of more flooding in the community. POSTED TO DAILYCAMERA.COM 09/15/2013 10:37:56 AM MDT

Officials: Stranded residents should use flares, sheets, mirrors Monday to alert helicopters 235 unaccounted for as weather slowed search and rescue efforts Sunday By Brittany Anas and John Aguilar Camera Staff Writers

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major air rescue for the Boulder County foothills devastated by 100-year floodwaters is planned for Monday, with residents asked to use white sheets, reflective mirrors, flares and signal fires to alert helicopter pilots to their locations. “The pilots are going to go anywhere and everywhere they can,” said Gabrielle Boerkircher, a spokeswoman for Boulder County. “People need to be prepared to be evacuated. They need to try to flag down the choppers in any way they can.” She said residents should be ready with a bag of medications, clothes and other important PAGE 1


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Day Four Coverage

Photo by Jeremy Papasso / The Daily Camera Colleen Keane looks through a pile of destroyed belongings on Sunday, Sept. 15, in Boulder. items — and should wait until they get a signal to approach the helicopter after it lands. She acknowledged that many of those in need of rescue may not have phone or Internet service and won’t know the helicopters are on their way, but the county is doing everything it can to get the word out. A time when the helicopters will start flying hasn’t yet been determined, but she said the goal is to take advantage of the clearer weather that’s forecast Monday. After a reprieve Saturday from the torrential downpours that had dropped nearly 15 inches of rain on Boulder beginning last Monday evening, Sunday’s nearly 2-inch rainfall and low-hanging fog grounded helicopters and complicated rescue efforts. Boulder County was under a flood warning until 9 p.m. Sunday and, in north Boulder, both Twomile and Fourmile creeks were flooding Sunday afternoon, city officials said. But the rain Sunday didn’t produce significant flooding within the city or county. The historic flood has killed at least three and left 235 unaccounted for in Boulder County. The flood also has caused at least $100 million to $150 million in damage to roads, bridges and other structures in the county, according to early estimates from the Boulder Office of Emergency Management. Given the severity of the damage, President Barack Obama has signed a disaster declaration and ordered federal aid for Boulder County residents. The action makes federal funding available to those affected by the flood, and Boulder County officials are urging people to make claims — even if they have flood insurance coverage — to help gauge the severity of the devastating floodwaters. The aid can include grants for temporary housing and home repairs, low-cost loans to cover uninsured property losses, and other programs to help individuals and business owners recover. Boulder County Sheriff Joe Pelle on Sunday said the number of people unaccounted for doesn’t necessarily represent people who are definitively missing, but instead is a list of those who have not been in contact with loved ones. “This information concerns the people who care for someone but can’t account for them,” Pelle said. He said two detectives from his department have joined a search and rescue team in Jamestown to attempt to retrieve the body of a man believed to have died when his house collapsed. PAGE 2


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Day Four Coverage

Photo by Cliff Grassmick / The Daily Camera Carlos Duron, 3, plays on a cot, while his mother, Vilma Maldonado, talks on the phone in Mead, Colorado on September 15, 2013. Both flood evacuees were staying at Mead High School set up by the Red Cross. But the rescue crew needs heavy equipment to start the recovery process, and Pelle didn’t know when his office would be able to get some up the canyon. Officials estimate 35 bridges need to be repaired and said rushing floodwaters have damaged at least 100 miles of roads. Additionally, flooding has damaged at least 100 minor structures, such as walking bridges near Boulder Creek, said Liz Donaghey, a spokeswoman for emergency operations. The $150 million damage estimate doesn’t include damage to private residences, officials said. Crews don’t yet have a damage estimate for city and county buildings. Walls of water and mudslides have crushed homes in Boulder’s mountain towns the hardest, and search and rescue crews Saturday performed what is being called the largest aerial rescue since Hurricane Katrina. More than 1,200 people have been evacuated so far. Crews on Saturday were able to send helicopters into the mountain towns PAGE 3


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Day Four Coverage

Photo by Paul Aiken / The Daily Camera US Postal Service Letter Carrier Mike Posniewsky looks to deliver mail across a washed out Topaz Drive in Boulder on Sunday September 15, 2013.

Additional coverage samples (links) on Sunday, Sept. 15 Boulder County activists concerned about flooded oil, gas wells: http:// www.dailycamera.com/news/boulderflood/ci_24102154 Thousands wait for word from Boulder flood’s ‘unaccounted for’: http://www. dailycamera.com/news/boulder-flood/ ci_24102741 Jamestown residents talk about rebuilding their beloved town: http:// www.dailycamera.com/news/boulderflood/ci_24103080 Nearly 300 remain at flood shelters in Boulder County: http://www. dailycamera.com/news/boulder-flood/ ci_24102274 With Sunday’s rain, Boulder on verge of breaking all-time annual precipitation record: http://www. dailycamera.com/news/boulder-flood/ ci_24100090

of western Boulder County as well as highclearance trucks into Lyons to evacuate stranded residents, with Pelle calling the operation “an amazing 24 hours of saving lives.” About 500 people were driven out of Lyons, but many of the other rescues Saturday were performed by helicopter as the National Guard staged an air rescue campaign from Boulder Municipal Airport. Coroner Emma Hall on Saturday evening released the identities of two of the three people killed by the flooding in Boulder County. Those victims were Wiyanna Nelson and Wesley Quinlan, both 19. Sheriff ’s officials said the teens died after getting out of the car they were in on Linden Avenue and being swept away by the rushing floodwaters. Hall has not yet identified the third victim claimed by the storm in Boulder County, but residents of Jamestown have said they believe it was former Jamestown Mercantile owner Joseph Howlett, 72. Neighbors fear Howlett was killed when his house collapsed in a mudslide Wednesday night.

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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Day Five Coverage

Photo by Mark Leffingwell / The Daily Camera SFC Keith Bart helps a woman who was winched up to a helicopter outside Jamestown Colorado that was cut off due to flooding. The aircraft was flown by members of 2-4 GSAB 4th Infantry Division based in Ft. Carson. POSTED TO DAILYCAMERA.COM 09/16/2013 08:07:26 AM MDT |

Boulder County flooding destroys at least 119 homes, damages 111 more More than 200 more people rescued from foothills via air, ground Monday By Ashley Dean, Camera Staff Writer

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oulder County late Monday revealed the first hint of the extent of property damage wrought by last week’s historic 100-year flood, announcing that, so far, officials have confirmed 119 homes were destroyed by rampaging floodwaters and mudslides, while another 111 were damaged — numbers that surely will rise in the coming days and weeks. Additionally, one commercial building was confirmed destroyed and 28 more damaged. That news followed Monday’s successful resumption of the Boulder airlift, with helicopters from the Colorado National Guard — aided by the end to nearly a week’s worth of rain — ferrying trapped residents out of the foothills back to Boulder Municipal Airport. By 9:45 p.m., the Boulder Office of Emergency Management reported that 215 people were PAGE 1


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Day Five Coverage

Photo by Mark Leffingwell / The Daily Camera Members of the a FEMA Urban Search & Rescue team and Colorado National Guard check a map to begin checking homes off of Lee Hill Drive in Boulder, Colorado September 16, 2013.

Photo by Paul Aiken / The Daily Camera A heavily damaged home along the Fourmile Canyon Creek on Lee Hill Drive in Boulder Colorado.

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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Day Five Coverage evacuated by air Monday, with another 11 rescued by ground. That comes after more than 1,200 were flown and driven out of the Boulder County foothills Saturday during a one-day interruption in the rain. “Today was a really good day,” said Gabrielle Boerkircher, a spokeswoman for Boulder County. “They were able to do a lot of things in the air and on the ground. Tuesday, we’ll just go out and do as much as we possibly can in a day.” The number of people still unaccounted for fell to 183 on Monday, with officials saying 567 people who once were unaccounted for have been contacted. “That’s been going down significantly every time we bring back a group of evacuees, which is great,” Boerkircher said of the figure. “It sounds like the calls are slowing down, too, so it sounds like less people are being reported unaccounted for.” Among those rescued Monday: 120 pets, mostly dogs. Two of those evacuees, though, were spider monkeys. Boerkircher said she had no further information about the spider monkeys, which are not legal in Colorado, and did not know whether they were confiscated upon arrival at the airport. Officials said more than 1,100 people were deployed by air and on foot in Monday’s searchand-rescue mission. Military helicopters began taking off from Boulder Municipal Airport as soon as the fog and the rain cleared about 9 a.m. However, the National Weather Service issued a flash flood watch for the city of Boulder and the Fourmile Fire burn area from noon to 7 p.m. Monday. New storms, though, never developed, and the helicopters flew all day. Three people have been confirmed dead in Boulder County from last week’s torrential floods — one in Jamestown and two in the Linden Drive area of Boulder County. Statewide, the death toll rose to eight on Monday.

‘We knew we couldn’t stay’ Those rescued from the foothills during Monday’s aerial and ground operations were brought to emergency shelters at the YMCA in Boulder and the Coors Events Center on the University of Colorado campus. At the YMCA on Monday afternoon, the refrain was the same from evacuees: No power. No phones. No roads. Asked about the conditions in the homes they left behind, they all listed the things they had gone without. Though many of their homes were undamaged, their town was too isolated for them to stay. The small group gathered around the playground on Mapleton Avenue had come by helicopter from Pinewood Springs, a small town between Lyons and Estes Park. A line of firefighters stood at the curb on Mapleton, ready to help unload the school buses full of evacuees coming from Boulder Municipal Airport. “The barter system was already in effect,” Chris Chieffo said. “People didn’t have water. Food was running out for some people. No communication from the outside world. We just knew we couldn’t stay any longer.” Chieffo had his dogs Peko and Cosmo with him, and he wasn’t the only one with PAGE 3


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1,000-Year Rain; Historic Flood: Day Five Coverage Photo by Jeremy Papasso / The Daily Camera Rocky Mountain Rescue workers Katie Johnson, at left, Chris Wentz, Kevin Cossel and Sal Silvester make a game plan before heading out on rescue missions by helicopter on Monday, Sept. 16, at the Boulder Municipal Airport in Boulder.

pets in tow. Most of the evacuees had at least one dog, if not more, and some also had cats. One woman had her bird in a blanket-covered cage. Another was offering to pick up supplies for everyone at PetCo. Gary and Jennie Dorsch had their dog and 13-year-old cat in carriers, and a camera full of photos documenting the last few days. The couple had been collecting rain water in gallon buckets and large trash cans. “There’s water running everywhere. I don’t know how to explain it,” Jennie Dorsch said. “We collected enough water for two weeks to cook and drink.” The Dorsches pointed out that there was no place in town to get groceries. They had enough supplies to get by for two weeks, but knew they should get out when the evacuation started. “We didn’t feel like we were prepared for months of isolation,” she said.

‘Community supported itself ’ In the days before the evacuation, the town met twice a day in the firehouse to get information. People had community dinners and focused on eating the food that would soon go bad, like frozen meat. The Colorado Cherry Company, located in the heart of town on North St. Vrain Drive, held potluck dinners. Some people who were able to get out earlier left behind food for their neighbors. “The community really supported itself,” Chieffo said. “I can’t say enough about the community of Pinewood.”

Additional coverage samples (links) on Monday, Sept. 16 'Boots on the ground': FEMA rescue crews head back into Boulder foothills: http://www.dailycamera. com/news/boulder-flood/ ci_24106633 Nederland warns residents that Boulder Canyon could be closed for a month: http://www.dailycamera. com/news/boulder-flood/ ci_24107210 Residents mobilize to save Boulder's Mapleton Mobile Home Park from flood: http://www.dailycamera. com/news/boulder-flood/ ci_24109326

Boulder returns to some normalcy as businesses, The evacuation itself was a challenge. CU re-open: http://www. Katherine Baker, a small young woman loaded down with bags and dailycamera.com/news/ with several pets in carriers, said she hiked 45 minutes from her house boulder-flood/ci_24109061 to reach the helicopter out of town. “The house was OK, but our bridge was out — it was gone,” she said. East Boulder County on There was also the problem of what to pack when carrying capacity the mend faster than most: http://www.dailycamera. is limited and a return date is uncertain. com/news/boulder-flood/ “It’s so surreal,” Tory Fogerty said. “We had days to plan and you can only take two bags. We don’t know how long it will be. It could be ci_24109840 Christmas. It could be spring. It’s the not knowing that’s... you know.” Despite the hardship, the Pinewood Springs evacuees were in relatively good spirits. They told stories of people cracking jokes at the town meetings, and kids and adults alike were enthusiastic about PAGE 4


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Photo by Jeremy Papasso / The Daily Camera Evacuees hurry across the tarmac after being rescued by helicopter from the Pinewood Springs area on Monday, Sept. 16, at the Boulder Municipal Airport in Boulder. riding in the massive Chinook helicopters. “At our age, we’ve been through a few things,” Jennie Dorsch said as her husband looked through their pictures of flooded yards and damaged roads. “It’s just one of those things mother nature decides to do.” She added: “You should ride in a Chinook if you can.” Camera Staff Writer Mitchell Byars contributed to this report.

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