Quote:
Originally Posted by Rochard
Another thing that bothers me is the small towns that constantly get hit with floods. The flooding happens every five to ten years, but they are going to be strong and they are going rebuild. Why? They already know this is going to happen again. (I bet they are also paying out the ass for flood insurance.) Why wouldn't they rebuild somewhere else? The next town over? Two miles over? On a hill. At least this way when the river crests in four years and Main Street gets flooded again, they won't lose everything.
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Rochard, I'll give you a perfect example. Ellicott City, Maryland. Main Street is at the bottom of a hill. The leaders in the community decided to overdevelop the wooded land above the town. Because of this, flooding is now MUCH worse than it used to be.
"For 200+ years the flooding in Ellicott City came from the rising of the Patapsco River and was mostly limited to lower Main Street. During major rain storms the water was absorbed into the ground in the surrounding woods north and west of town and the Tiber River, which runs east along Fredrick Road, was wide enough to handle the overflow that ran through town. (rivers have the uncanny ability to be just as wide and deep as they need to be) In the past 20+ years developers and Howard County zoning board have banded together to pave over all of those woods with medium and high density housing. The yellow area is mostly new construction built in the last two decades. When you pave over the natural terrain and add sewers and roads that lead directly to Main Street (red area) you get a high speed rollercoaster for the water to ride right through town. This “top down” flooding has nothing to do with Mother Nature. This is a man-made disaster caused by greedy and/or uninformed people who decided that building homes above this wonderful city was worth the risk of destroying it. Our county has an infill problem and the Zoning Board never seems to grasp the big picture. My house is on one of the highest hills in Ellicott City and every year that more houses are built in the backyards of my neighbors, the more ground water I get in my basement. My house was built 100+ years ago and when I bought it in 2001 it didn’t even have a sump pump because it didn’t need one. In 2011, during Hurricane Lee, and right after two new houses were built in my neighbors back yard, I had to cut a emergency hole in the floor with a pick axe through a foot of water to pump it out with a submersible pump.
The county executive may be right that this is a “once in a thousand year storm” but anyone who has ever been on Main Street in a rain storm knows that flooding is a common occurrence since the construction above town became so out of control. Now, in perfect irony, The state and county will spend more money than they earn on tax from new construction to fix the damage it created. This is a horrible disaster but nature had nothing to do with it."
VIDEO >
'A MAN-MADE DISASTER'? | Did development worsen Ellicott City flooding?
The blame shouldn't rest on the people who live there.
