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It will be a wet walk to the mail box for these folks on west Washington Street in Alexandria as flood waters have risen around them.
John P. Cleary / The Herald Bulletin


Published February 06, 2008 09:46 pm - Roadways across Alexandria were shut down on Wednesday as flood waters covered the town’s landscape.

9:46 p.m.: Water-logged Alexandria stays afloat amidst flooding


By Brandi Watters

Roadways across Alexandria were shut down on Wednesday as flood waters covered the town’s landscape. The lawns of many homes dotting Indiana 9 were saturated with swirling, brown water as low-lying areas gathered rain from the storm.

Five streets were at least partially closed within the city as a result of Tuesday night storms and Wednesday rainfall, which dumped 2-3 inches across Madison County.

Water swarmed sections of Washington and John streets along Indiana 9, threatening to flood area businesses. The spare shed of a small, white home along Indiana 9 stood like an island as flood waters inched closer to the highway, threatening to drown the main artery.

Portions of Chestnut and Berry streets were also under water.

In response to the threat of city-wide flooding, city officials established evacuation centers at the high school auditorium and the community center. City officials also offered sand bags and bagging materials through the street and water departments for those residents worried about property damage.

The threat of excessive flooding was more imminent as city officials worried that the Pipe Creek dike would not hold the waterway.

According to Mayor Jack Woods, 13 Alexandria residents living on flood plains were called and warned about the threat of flooding.

The Washington Street bridge was inches from being engulfed by the fast-moving waters beneath. Down the road, low-lying parts of Washington were closed near the water treatment plant as water pushed up onto the roadway.

A collection of Alexandria firefighters who waded through the rushing flood waters of Pipe Creek to check the status of the dike determined Wednesday afternoon that the structure would hold.

Police Chief Brian Burnett warned that the failure of the dike would lead to the flooding of Indiana 9 within 15 minutes.

Fortunately, the dike held, and flooding was kept to a minimal.

The threat of flooding on Indiana 9 was ever-present as it passed Washington Street. At 2 p.m. Wednesday, water gathering in the tree line to the east of the highway rose with the flooding across the street. The roadway was inches from being overcome before the rain finally subsided.

The Village Pantry on Indiana 9 closed shop around noon on Wednesday as the Washington Street flood waters crept closer to the store’s entrance. Village Pantry employees hastily piled sand bags against the doorway and moved merchandise to avoid damage. With only two dry parking spaces left in the lot, and the promise of more rain on its way, the store was shut down. A hand-scribbled note hung in the entrance to the darkened store, explaining the unforeseen closure.

The store and its merchandise were spared as waters receded late Wednesday afternoon.

The impact on the rest of Madison County paled in comparison to Alexandria’s saturated streets, but some county roads were underwater most of Wednesday.



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