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Evacuations Lifted in Flooded California Wine Country

About 2,600 homes, businesses and other structures were flooded by water up to 8' deep.

This satellite image shows The Russian River flooding Guerneville, California. The storm-swollen river is slowly receding after causing extensive flooding, but more rainfall is expected.
This satellite image shows The Russian River flooding Guerneville, California. The storm-swollen river is slowly receding after causing extensive flooding, but more rainfall is expected.
DigitalGlobe, a Maxar company via AP

GUERNEVILLE, Calif. (AP) — Jason Flint prepared for flooding in Northern California by putting his deli's valuable equipment on pallets and milk crates stacked several feet above the ground. It wasn't enough, as he found out Friday when he returned to Guerneville after two days of flooding in Sonoma County's famed wine country. Mud-covered refrigerators, display cases and food crates were strewn about by 6-foot-high murky water. 

"My entire deli is wiped out," Flint said. "It's crazy. It's too much to get my head around this."

Evacuation orders were lifted and all roads into Guerneville and neighboring Monte Rio were opened Friday, almost three days after being cut off by the rain-swollen Russian River. Days of heavy rain had left the towns reachable only by boat Wednesday. About 2,600 homes, businesses and other structures in the popular tourist destination were flooded by water up to 8 feet deep and about 3,700 people were ordered to evacuate. 

No one was injured or killed and the river receded below the 32-foot flood level. However, more than 200 miles north, a man drowned while trying to reach his Humboldt County home by walking through about 5 feet of water.

Benito Nunez-Rodriguez, 35, of Ferndale was trying to walk from his job at a dairy farm to his home Wednesday evening when he was carried away by the fast-moving current, said Samantha Karges, a spokeswoman with the Humboldt County Sheriff's Office. Co-workers had tried to encourage Nunez-Rodriguez to spend the night with them rather than cross the flood waters, but he wanted to get home, Joseph Alexandre, manager of Alexandre Family Farm, said Friday. 

"We're all pretty shaken up about what happened and thinking what could we have done differently," Alexandre said.

Along the main road in Guerneville, business owners inspected the damage caused by floodwaters that rose about 46 feet Wednesday night, the river's highest level in 24 years. Chris Reid, a manager of True Value Hardware, said they were able to salvage cash registers, computers, chain saws and other expensive equipment by putting them on the second floor of the two-story building. 

But on the ground level, all the shelves were covered in chest-high mud. He and employees washed down rubber boots, brooms, shovels, buckets and other salvaged cleaning supplies and brought them to the sidewalk to sell at a discounted rate.

Locals are accustomed to the river flooding in rainy weather, but not like this, he said. "The store has gone through all the floods but this is a lot more than we expected," Reid said. 

Flint said he knew flooding was inevitable when he opened his deli but he couldn't afford to pay $2,000 per month for flood insurance. "I've been here 17 years and I've never seen the river that high. I pray the worst of it is over," he said, adding that he plans to rebuild his business. 

Sonoma County spokesman Hannah Euser said even though evacuation orders were lifted for Guerneville and Monte Rio, residents were encouraged to wait to enter their homes until they are inspected. Damage assessment crews planned to mark green, yellow and red tags to indicate whether they are safe for re-entry.

"We have a lot of buildings that have taken in water and we will be inspecting them to determine if they are safe," she said. Euser said crews were still clearing trees, tires and even propane tanks from the streets while workers with Pacific Gas and Electric checked power lines. Officials warned people to stay away from the area unless they have necessary business. 

Light rain was forecast for Friday night in the area and Euser said emergency personnel would remain working through the weekend. She said there were continuing concerns for mudslides in areas scarred by wildfires two years ago.

"We are not completely out of the woods here," said Assemblyman Jim Wood, who represents the area in the state Legislature. Another wet system carrying the aptly named "atmospheric river" is in the forecast next week, though forecasters say it's expected to affect central California. 


Associated Press writer Daisy Nguyen in San Francisco also contributed to this report. 


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