Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Flood walls doing job

- RYAN J. FOLEY

Cory Harrison (left) and Josh Jensen climb over a flood wall Tuesday after helping a friend with a business flooded by the Cedar River in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Officials in Cedar Rapids say their elaborate system of temporary flood walls is successful­ly protecting thousands of homes and businesses from floodwater.

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa — An elaborate system of temporary flood walls largely protected Cedar Rapids homes and businesses Tuesday as the river that runs through the city reached its second-highest peak ever.

City officials said the 9.8-mile system of Hesco barriers and earthen berms that contractor­s erected over the weekend was successful­ly holding back the rain-swollen Cedar River.

The city, Iowa’s second-largest, received good news as the river crested Tuesday morning at 22.1 feet, a foot lower than predicted Monday and 3 feet lower than forecast over the weekend. That was 9 feet below the 2008 flood that destroyed thousands of homes and businesses in the worst natural disaster in Iowa history.

The Hesco barriers used to hold back the floodwater­s are made of steel mesh panels lined with a thick polypropyl­ene material that can be quickly filled with sand or dirt, usually using a front-loader. The barriers, which have been used extensivel­y by the military in Iraq and Afghanista­n, keep water from seeping through to the other side but allow moisture to drain out the bottom.

City crews had worked through the night to patch any weaknesses in the protection system and pump out water that seeped through the barriers or came up through the saturated ground.

“City employees and contractor­s worked in really heroic ways to make sure the temporary system we put in place was fully functional,” said City Manager Jeff Pomeranz.

Their work continued Tuesday as the city turned its focus undergroun­d to its pressure-packed sewer system, which officials worried could send water shooting onto streets and create dangerous conditions for bystanders.

“The enemy now is what we don’t see,” Pomeranz said.

City crews pumped water back into the river Tuesday in downtown and surroundin­g neighborho­ods, which were largely abandoned as residents heeded the city’s call to evacuate.

Nick Jelinek, 37, said the flood protection was working “great” as he pumped water out of the basement of a business building he owns in the usually bustling New Bo district. “This is as good as it could go,” he said.

Jelinek said another building he was renovating into a reception hall was on the “wrong side” of the barriers and had three feet of water inside — a setback he called modest. At least a handful of other buildings, including two bars, appeared to have major water damage.

While the protection system was largely working, city officials said many homes and businesses near the river will likely have water in their basements.

 ?? AP/CHARLIE NEIBERGALL ??
AP/CHARLIE NEIBERGALL

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