Flooding in the south, snow in the north in Ohio
Flood victims in the southern part of the state spent Friday cleaning up gunk from some of the heaviest rain in years, while northern
Dorothy Combs wielded a pressure washer to flush mud from the porch of her home in
“Water is still seeping into the basement because the ground is so saturated,” Combs said.
She said a visit to the town near Cincinnati on Thursday evening by Gov. Ted Strickland was a nice touch but probably wouldn’t mean any financial help to replace the ruined appliances —furnace, central air, water heater and water softener — in her basement.
“We’re looking at $8,000 just to get those appliances taken care of,” she said.
She and her husband, Robert, have flood insurance, she said.
High water caused headaches elsewhere. About 60 state roads were closed or partly blocked by flooding, and for the second morning in a row, commuters heading into
“Roadways are beginning to open up, restrictions are being removed. So that’s a good sign,” said Scott Varner, deputy director of the Ohio Department of Transportation.
Motorists and their cars’ suspension systems were feeling the effects of the state’s weather pattern.
“There have been a few more potholes than usual due to the winter and the cleanup from the floods,” said Greene County Engineer Bob Geyer.
In northern
A white Easter was in the forecast.
“I’m tired of it, yes I am,” said Larry Wetzel, 59, of suburban
“It’s pretty hard when the sun doesn’t come out for a week at a time,” he said.
Joe Seguin, 44, of
“Other than that, it’s just part of life,”
Combs, 49, said her home close to the Little Miami River had been flooded twice before in the 27 years she’s lived there, in 1997 and in 2004, but this time was the worst.
The couple had just decided a month ago to put the house up for sale.
“I do wish I had sold it before this happened,” Combs said.
Flooding from the same storm system that hit
Most rivers were receding Friday, but the Great Miami River at Miamitown, northwest of
Farmland along the Scioto in Jasper, a hamlet about 60 miles south of Columbus, remained flooded but damage to nearby homes appeared minimal, said Donald Simonton, director of the Emergency Management Agency in Pike County.
The Great Miami, which was expected to fall below flood stage by Friday night, crested at 25.85 feet Wednesday at Miamitown, the fourth highest level since 1959, when record-keeping began at that location, the weather service said.
Forecasters on Friday turned their attention to the Ohio River, which had crested just below the 52-foot flood stage at
A low-lying section of U.S. 52 south of the city was under water Friday. That area floods when the
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