Rain and melting snow swamped Nevada today, causing
the worst flooding in the Reno area since a January 1997 flood that caused
$1 billion in damages.
High water and mudslides closed major roads,
including Interstate 80 about 25 miles west of Reno and Highway 89 near
Truckee, Calif.
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I-80
-- the major corridor linking northern California and points east -- was
expected to remain closed for at least two days, said California
Department of Transportation spokesman Mark Dinger.
Six truck rigs
were caught in the mudslide early today, but no injuries were reported. It
will cost about $5 million to clean up the slide, officials
said.
"No work can be done until the slide stabilizes and we don't
know when that will occur," Dinger said. "Certainly, I-80 could be closed
for longer than two days."
Up to 1-2 inches of rain on valley
floors and 6-8 inches of rain in the Lake Tahoe area prompted flood
warnings along the eastern Sierra.
Flood waters inundated an
undetermined number businesses this morning along the Truckee River in
east Reno and Sparks, said Regional Emergency Operations Center spokesman
Steve Frady.
The Truckee was expected to crest early this afternoon
in downtown Reno at 13 feet, 2 feet above flood stage. Just to the east in
Sparks, it was expected to crest at 22 feet, 7 feet above flood
stage.
While those levels are near those of the 1997 New Year's Day
flood, officials stress water flows will be substantially less because
upstream reservoirs are well below capacity.
"We're hoping the snow
level falls and the situation doesn't turn out as bad as projected," Frady
said. "But there are businesses sandbagging right now to prepare for the
worst."
While Reno casinos remained open this morning, all three
Truckee River bridges in the downtown were closed.
Water was
flowing over at least one of them, and crews were working to prevent trees
and other debris from blocking the river's flow under the
bridges.
Crews also were trying to prevent the Reno Hilton's huge
outdoor pond from overflowing onto nearby Reno-Tahoe International
Airport. The 1997 flood shut down the airport.
"That's been a top
priority," Frady said. "It's really critical to keep the airport open,
especially if we end up with a two-day closure of I-80."
Two Sparks
trailer parks along the Truckee and two such Dayton parks along the Carson
River were evacuated this morning.
Flood waters reduced U.S. 395 to
one travel lane in each direction south of Reno.