Two city residents renew drainage complaints
Published 7:31 pm Wednesday, November 16, 2016
Washington’s City Council, during its meeting Monday, heard from two voices from the past — and with the same messages.
Charles Daniels, an Iron Creek resident, asked the city for help regarding drainage in the subdivision. Linda Witchell, an East 12th Street resident, wants the city to address a water problem under her home that she believes is caused by aging pipes that are part of the city’s drainage system.
Daniels and Witchell have appeared before the council several times in past years.
Daniels, who lives on Ore Court, has asked the city to help Iron Creek residents with recurring drainage problems several times in the past 12 years or so. He acknowledges city efforts have helped alleviate drainage problems, adding that those efforts have not eliminated those problems. Daniels said he and some of his neighbors feel like the city “just pushed us off.”
In the wake of Hurricane Matthew, some floodwaters “got into mailboxes” of some Iron Creek residents, according to Daniels. “We need some help. We need it now,” Daniels said.
Although floodwaters have never entered her house since she’s lived there, flooding and related drainage problems have damaged her HVAC (heating, ventilation and air conditioning) system and yard, she said. Witchell contends old, deteriorating drainage pipes running under the house sometimes “spurt” water — even when it does not rain — under the crawlspace of her house “with the force of a fire hydrant” that sometimes “drowns my furnace.”
“You guys need to find some place than under my house to store the extra stormwater. At least give us back our ditches and slow it down a little. … Flood insurance won’t allow me to elevate my HVAC system,” Witchell said. “I need a Band-Aid while we figure it all out.”
Witchell said that in the 11 years after Hurricane Floyd in 1999, she had no flood-related damage at her home. “Since 2010, the (drainage) improvements that have been made have increased my damages exponentially. I’ve had four flood insurance claims in six years. I only had two in the 20 years before that. Flood insurance doesn’t cover all the damage or expenses,” she said. “These three events in September and October will cost me thousands of dollars, plus two deductibles. I can’t afford this.”
Witchell told the council the city can “easily fix this” by allowing someone to work on the drainage pipes on her property.
The council instructed city staff to look into the complaints lodged by Daniels and Witchell, with the goal of finding solutions, if possible.