LEWISTON — It was bound to happen.
After days of constant rain, a slow moving thunderstorm Thursday night caused problems in all varieties as a steady downpour settled over the area and stayed there.
It was particularly bad in Lewiston.
"We've got flooded streets, roads washed out and alarms going off like crazy," said Lewiston police Sgt. Danny LaChance. "We've got reports of power out, basements flooding and a manhole completely off."
That all happened starting at about 9:15 p.m. Add to it vehicles stuck in flooded intersections, cars and trucks stalled after barrelling through giant puddles and reports of flooding just about everywhere.
"We've had a lot of rain come all at once," LaChance said.
As drains backed up and rainwater spilled into the streets, police went scrambling to several areas of the city. On Lisbon Street, several intersections were flooded, most noticeably at East Avenue and the intersections following into downtown.
At the bottom of Bartlett Street hill, near Adams Avenue, a foot of water covered the roadway. Police and public works crews quickly went out and threw up barricades, steering traffic around the high water.
On Nichols Street, one resident reported 8 inches in the basement. Fire crews were sent over.
Similar problems were reported around the city, on Leavitt Avenue, Morris Avenue, Adams, White, Willow and Charles streets. By 10 p.m., police, fire and public works crews were still moving from one scene of wet chaos to another.
"It's a little bit of everything," LaChance said.
At one point during the rush of emergency calls, a car was reported washing down the street in a stream of rainwater, possibly with someone inside. That report turned out to be bogus. But as soon as police cleared that scene, there was a report of a roof collapse somewhere else in the city.
A car was stuck in deep water on the roadway on Main Street, beneath the train trestle near Marden's. Police were standing by and steering traffic around the stalled vehicle.
Auburn at first seemed to be spared the type of rain-related problems experienced in its sister city.
"We haven't had many problems at all," Auburn police Lt. Tim Cougle said at about 9:55 p.m. "A few reports of storm basins overflowing, things like that."
Almost as soon as he said it, there came a report of a basement flooded on Oak Street and an officer radioed in that water drains were starting to back up in various parts of the city.
North River Road in Auburn was reported washed over at about 10 p.m. The police radio in Auburn started to crackle with the kinds of reports that haunted Lewiston an hour before.
"Maybe Auburn takes longer to flood than Lewiston," Cougle said at about 10:05 p.m.
The idea isn't that farfetched. According to David Glenn, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service in Gray, Lewiston and Auburn sort of got picked on.
"There's a cluster that just settled right over your area," Glenn said. "The motion of the system just trained over that one area."
The same thing happened to Freeport earlier in the night, Glenn said. There, nearly an inch of rain fell in about an hour. Glenn predicted the same amount would be measured by Friday morning in the Twin Cities.
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Why doesn't all the members of the legislation take cuts on their payroll and their insurance coverage and see if they can manage. I'm already fighting DHS because of a mistake they made and because of their mistake my income tax refund is in jeopardy. I've already lost my maine state refund. This is wrong. DHS takes money from people who are on the system because of the mistake DHS made. That's not right. Why should the people be punished for a mistake that wasn't their fault. Stop spending other people's money. I work as much as I can so That my 8 yr old can go to school and have food, a roof what I make versus my rent and bills barely lets me have any money left over for dr visits, car repairs or basic household necessities, toothpaste, toilet paper etc.... Why don't they take it back from the people who defrauded DHS. I have mainecare but I don't have dental. Maine care only pays $8.00 for eyeglasses and they break all the time because they are cheap. The only way I can get mainecare to pay for a dentist is if I break a tooth or need one pulled. I can't just go to the dentist to fill a cavitiy or to have my teeth cleaned. That isn't fair. The legislature is supposed to be helping those citizens that are having a hard time. Instead of going on those fancy vacations, buying that new car why don't some of you Take your bonuses and put it back into the system. If I could afford to live like that I would give up my bonuses. It's about caring, oh wait the only thing the legislature cares about is what in their pockets and who they can screw next.!!! I'm all for rules and regulations but it needs to apply to everyone. Starting with the lawmakers.
One gentleman asked for published, peer-reviewed information on wind power. He was told, correctly, that such information can be hard to get, although there is of course published work showing serious effects on bird and bat populations. However, one source does come to mind: the US Energy Information Administration. They publish information about how much money we spend as taxpayers to support various forms of energy, and it can be quite interesting. For instance, natural gas gets $0.25 per MWh; coal gets $0.44. The owners of industrial wind turbines get $23.37/MWh.
Does that answer anyone's questions about why Angus King et al are working so hard to get in on this racket?
If the SJ thinks that windpower is a valuable part of the mix, and that subsidies are important, perhaps the answer is to have a level playing field here. And incidentally, according to the head of ISO-New England, wind turbines are so spread out over the landscape as to require a massive investment in transmission lines with an estimated cost of $19-25 Billion.... we would be paying for that, of course, on our electric bills. And paying again in terms of lost tourism revenue.
Another item that has come up here is the usual accusation about anti-windpower people just being a bunch of NIMBYs. Well, I can't speak for others but I sure hope I'm one! Love, charity, and caring for one's neighborhood are virtues that begin at home, and then hopefully go out to encompass more and more of the world and its people. I think it's high time people quit using this as an insult-- it's like sneering at someone for loving his mother.
However there is a kind of NIMBY that deserves the perjorative use of the term, and that is one who supports an activity as long as it's in someone else's backyard, not his. Thinking of the Natural Resources Council of Maine here... I'm not a member any more!
I've read a lot of words from Maine people who are fighting industrial wind, but have never heard one say it was fine as long as somebody else had to suffer, not them. So please, if you want to use the term make sure you use it wisely.
I'm relieved to hear that she is okay but didn't the city make this a one lane street now? It used to be two but since they did some road work, it is now lined as one lane. And did the 'passing' car stop to help or did they continue driving off, knowing full and well that they were in the wrong?? Charges need to be filed. This could've cost this poor woman her life or even who knows what else harm it could've caused!
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