are related to people who have been cut off and are trapped in their homes with rising water from the river. we anticipate that this will taper off during the course of the day and that the flooding is going to recede. there s no indication that the worst of it is, you know, not going to be behind us. yes. these are swift water rescue assets. the teams that are up there right now are both from vermont and also a contingent from north carolina. it is a unit that hales from the asheville area that works in the mountains in north carolina frequently. they relayed to our team leader that this is the worst flooding damage they ve seen. i m so sorry the community is going through this. i hope that the work can continue as this new rain event is on its way. thank you very much, jennifer morrison for joining us this
FEMA and the Michigan State Police are assessing spring flooding damage across the Upper Peninsula this week in an effort for state and federal relief funds.
where the hills above montecito and santa barbara here received as much as 15 inches within a 36 hour period. luckily the storm has passed for the next couple of days. we are expecting some rain through the weekend, but of a lighter condition. we experienced lots of flooding damage, isolated to different areas which were not like what was mimicked in 2018, when we had catastrophic mudslides through montecito with the death of over 23 people. and are you expecting the situation to get worse with the weather, and how is your team preparing? yeah, that s a good question. we feel we re on the backside of the storm now. we in the county had a lot of investment into our montecito area, which they did