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CTUIR wins federal grant to take on drought

One year later: Communities draw lessons from 2020 flood

One year later: Can it happen again?

Then conditions changed. As temperatures climbed, snowfall turned to rain, melting mountain snowpack. Runoff poured into the communities below, inundating waterways across Northeast Oregon and Southeast Washington. One research station in Umatilla County recorded waters rising approximately 8 feet in less than 20 hours. The aftermath showed hundreds of homes destroyed, thousands of people evacuated and total damages over $48 million. One life was lost. It was the second consecutive year of high waters, but its devastation was unparalleled in recent years. For many, there came a daunting question — could it happen again? A robust and growing body of research has many scientists convinced that climate change is contributing to more frequent and severe flooding — the most common weather-related disaster threat in the United States. And with planet-heating emissions continuing to rise, extreme weather events and related losses are likely to continue, unless efforts are made

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