My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
08-20-18 Health and Public Saftey & Utilities
sbend
>
Public
>
Common Council
>
Minutes
>
Committee Meeting Minutes
>
2018
>
Utilities
>
08-20-18 Health and Public Saftey & Utilities
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
9/25/2018 8:46:12 AM
Creation date
9/25/2018 8:49:20 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
City Council - City Clerk
City Council - Document Type
Committee Mtg Minutes
City Counci - Date
8/20/2018
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
16
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
Show annotations
View images
View plain text
0 CITY OF SOUTH BEND I OFFICE OF THE CLERK <br /> you look at this map (available in the City Clerk's Office), it shows the snowfall prior to when it <br /> started to warm up. If you look at the blue, which is indicating anywhere from eight(8)to sixteen <br /> (16) inches of snow depth, you can see that it's over the entire St. Joe Watershed Basin, and that <br /> was critical. <br /> He continued, Then we had precipitation. Temperatures warmed up and we had over eight (8) <br /> inches of rain which fell in February, which was an all-time record for the month. The previous <br /> record was five (5) inches. Most of that occurred in three (3) days. On February 20th, in one (1) <br /> day, we had three point seven five (3.75) inches of rain, which was the new single-season day <br /> record. Here we are with record events in snowfall and rainfall, along with temperatures warming <br /> up while the ground is saturated. These made for a perfect event for flooding. <br /> He described a graph (referencing a slide of a presentation which is available in the City Clerk's <br /> Office) which depicted the amount of snowfall, the maximum and minimum temperatures, along <br /> with the rainfall. He stated, Storms of this magnitude, and all of these different things falling into <br /> place, do not typically occur in any given year. This was a very extreme event, and it is not <br /> something you see very often. If you look at it in terms of river level, this was a five hundred <br /> (500)year event. If you look at it in terms of flow,we were well beyond a five hundred(500)year <br /> event. <br /> Mr. Metters, (referencing a slide in the presentation), pointed out that the gauges in other <br /> surrounding communities were at or near the record levels for those sites. He stated, If you were <br /> watching the storm track of the rain,this storm tracked south to northeast over the entire watershed, <br /> which caused a widespread event. South Bend reached the flood record and exceeded it. River <br /> levels were point two percent (0.2%) annual chance levels for the five hundred (500) year flood. <br /> FEMA uses a percent chance that you are going to get this type of flood. This was about a 2500 <br /> year flood. <br /> He went on, In August 2016, we had another event. I want to show how different storm events <br /> can happen and affect different areas. This was a very tense, low duration event. We had eight <br /> point five (8.5)inches of rain fall over a nineteen(19)hour period. This storm event was not even <br /> within the top twenty-five (25) historic readings on the South Bend gauge. It was just because of <br /> where the rain fell, how it fell, and what was going on within the rest of the watershed. The flow <br /> in the river during the 2016 event was about 9,000 cubic feet per second. Storms can be very hard <br /> to compare, so you can't just look at the numbers. <br /> He continued, The first (1St) thing we did was develop a questionnaire that was available online <br /> and was distributed door to door, and we ended up getting back a lot of good information. We <br /> asked questions ranging from if people flooded in 2018, if they flooded in 2016, if they flooded <br /> during any other events and how often, what was the source of the flooding, if they had backflow <br /> prevention devices, and we also asked them to provide comments. Those two hundred (200) <br /> responses helped us gain information we couldn't get from the data. <br /> He stated, A lot of analysis was done on the areas they were evaluating. In the North Shore <br /> Triangle, seven percent (7%) flooded in 2016, nineteen percent (19%) in 2018, and sixty-one <br /> percent (61%) flooded in both. Another question asked was whether residents' downspouts have <br /> been disconnected. Out of the people surveyed,Keller Park had sixty-six percent(66%)that were, <br /> EXCELLENCE ACCOUNTABILITY I INNOVATION I INCLUSION I EMPOWERMENT <br /> 455 County-City Building 227W Jefferson Bvld South Bend,Indiana 46601',p 574.235.9221 f574.235.9173 TTD574.235.5567 www.southbendin.gov <br /> 4 <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.