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The Washington Times Online Edition

Flooding causes millions in damage in Iowa

Water from Iowa's Maquoketa River surges over the bridge of the Delhi Dam as areas surrounding the river continue to flood on Saturday, July 24, 2010. (AP Photo/The Gazette, Julie Koehn)Water from Iowa’s Maquoketa River surges over the bridge of the Delhi Dam as areas surrounding the river continue to flood on Saturday, July 24, 2010. (AP Photo/The Gazette, Julie Koehn)

MONTICELLO, Iowa (AP) — Flooding from the Maquoketa River after an eastern Iowa dam failed has damaged dozens of homes and businesses, causing millions of dollars in damage in Monticello, a city official said Sunday.

The Lake Delhi dam failed Saturday as rising floodwater from the Maquoketa River ate a 30-foot-wide hole in it. Areas below the dam, including in Hopkinton and Monticello, were evacuated.

The river crested upstream of the dam at Manchester early Saturday afternoon at 24.53 feet — more than 10 feet above flood stage and well above its 2004 record of 21.66 feet — before it began to recede slowly.

Monticello Public Works Director Dana Edwards said about 50 homes and 20 businesses had major flood damage and the city’s sewer plant had been flooded and shut down about 7 p.m. Saturday.

Most of the city’s 3,700 residents could flush their toilets, but the waste was pouring into the river. Still, environmental damage shouldn’t be great because the waste was being diluted by the flood water, Mr. Edwards said.

The city’s drinking water system was working, “but we are asking people to use as little water as possible,” Mr. Edwards said.

Damage to private property likely would be in the millions of dollars, Mr. Edwards said. The cost of repairing the sewer plant wouldn’t be known until workers could get inside to assess the damage.

Pumps from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the city were being put into the city’s main sewer lines to try to keep water out of residents’ basements.

The hydroelectric dam on the Maquoketa River that created Lake Delhi in the 1920s is no longer used for power but maintains the lake for recreational purposes.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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