Just saw these dams were built in '45 and have never been opened due to a rain event.
Sasappis said:Out of curiosity, what do you think people should answer for?mazzag said:jabberwalkie09 said:Premium said:Irish_Man said:
Are they saying they're about to flood a portion of Houston to relieve a greater part of the city?
Along this line... who will it help and who will it mess up?
Well it's either flood a portion with a controlled release, or risk an uncontrolled release that could have bigger implications isn't it?
Someone needs to answer for it coming to this in the first place. This city and decisions will be studied for years. You can't control unprecedented amounts of rain but I've known since Thursday it was possible. Folks in charge should have too.
Knowing that 30"+ inches of rain was coming doesn't do much good.
They are already at 99ft, tax day flood was 102ish so they are rightfully nervous spillway is at 110 so they are trying to get it down controlled while they can is my guess.Sasappis said:And Barker's historical high is 95.2'. They are talking a crest well over that.Irish_Man said:
Just saw these dams were built in '45 and have never been opened due to a rain event.
mazzag said:
Evacuations would have put less strain on federal, state and local resources. Not to mention neighbors doing good deeds and no paycheck is coming next week.
If you don't live in a flood zone then flood insurance is really cheap. Everyone should have flood insurance as all water damage falls under the policy. Roof leak? Whatever happens inside the home is a flood claim. Pipe burst? The same. Washer hose burst? The same.dubi said:No.Oruc Reis said:
What happens if your home gets destroyed by a flood but you are outside of a flood plain and don't have flood insurance? Does homeowners cover it?
I buy flood insurance and live outside a flood zone.
If you don't live on a hill, I think everyone in the greater Houston area probably should.
mazzag said:
Evacuations would have put less strain on federal, state and local resources. Not to mention neighbors doing good deeds and no paycheck is coming next week.
All property is in a Flood zone, when people say they aren't in a flood zone they are actually in zone X.longeryak said:If you don't live in a flood zone then flood insurance is really cheap. Everyone should have flood insurance as all water damage falls under the policy. Roof leak? Whatever happens inside the home is a flood claim. Pipe burst? The same. Washer hose burst? The same.dubi said:No.Oruc Reis said:
What happens if your home gets destroyed by a flood but you are outside of a flood plain and don't have flood insurance? Does homeowners cover it?
I buy flood insurance and live outside a flood zone.
If you don't live on a hill, I think everyone in the greater Houston area probably should.
Remember there is a 30 day waiting periodsaltydog09 said:
Got it thanks. Buying it after this no matter what. $500 a year is cheap insurance.
NotGibbs said:
Does anyone have a flood map for the Ad***** release? Sounds like we're in the flood zone, but can't find a map
longeryak said:If you don't live in a flood zone then flood insurance is really cheap. Everyone should have flood insurance as all water damage falls under the policy. Roof leak? Whatever happens inside the home is a flood claim. Pipe burst? The same. Washer hose burst? The same.dubi said:No.Oruc Reis said:
What happens if your home gets destroyed by a flood but you are outside of a flood plain and don't have flood insurance? Does homeowners cover it?
I buy flood insurance and live outside a flood zone.
If you don't live on a hill, I think everyone in the greater Houston area probably should.
johnrth said:
Good Job Southwest https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2017/08/27/us/southwest-humanitarian-airlift-hobby-airport/index.html