> St. Pete leaders aim to tackle flooding problems as concerns grow from community members
St. Pete leaders aim to tackle flooding problems as concerns grow from community members
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“For the first time ever we actually had debris lines in the backyard,” said Anna Hellerqvist, pointing to where the sandbags are situated up against her St. Petersburg home.
Hellerqvist said she's lived in the Meadownlawn neighborhood for 20 years and has never seen flooding like they’ve experienced this summer.
“Every blade of grass you see here was completely underwater,” she added.
Her neighborhood is one of several that were essentially underwater after a September storm in St. Pete, during which officials responded to hundreds of calls for service, and 55 cars were found stalled out on roads.
Hellerqvist said she believes the problems have become worse due to the surrounding infrastructure and clogged storm drains in the area.
“The tree roots were taking over the drain and its been getting worse and worse ever since,” she said.
City officials have said the problem stems from the water system not being able to handle the sheer amount of water — more than 7 inches of rain that came in a relatively short amount of time. Most pipes were designed and built decades ago for average rainfall totals at that time.
“That water is going to go somewhere, so it stays in the [low-lying neighborhoods],” said Public Works Administrator Claude Tankersley during a resiliency meeting city leaders held on Thursday, as they looked into possible solutions to the ongoing issues.
The council’s Committee of the Whole meeting was focused on storm response, work and future planning, as well as looking ahead to next year’s budget and beyond.
The proposal is for more than $56 million for the storm water program budget, a roughly 28% increase since last year. That includes more funding for operations like expanded drain clearing teams, upgraded infrastructure, backflow preventers and pump stations.
MORE: https://www.wtsp.com/article/news/local/pinellascounty/st-pete-leaders-tackle-flooding-problems-concerns-from-neighbors-grow/67-c42df9fd-7cf4-4c01-a56b-4ffefdb2d850