Hawaii flooding prompts evacuation orders for more than 4,000 people
CBSN
Muddy floodwaters from severe rains inundated streets, swallowed vehicles and prompted evacuation orders for thousands of residents in towns north of Honolulu on Friday as officials warned of the possible failure of a 120-year-old dam. In:
Muddy floodwaters from severe rains inundated streets, swallowed vehicles and prompted evacuation orders for thousands of residents in towns north of Honolulu on Friday as officials warned of the possible failure of a 120-year-old dam.
Honolulu officials told some 4,000 residents in an emergency message to leave the area downstream of the Wahiawa dam because it's failing or expected to fail soon. The warning told residents to carpool because of heavy traffic.
Emergency sirens blared along Oahu's famed North Shore, where rising waters also damaged homes. Honolulu officials issued a "LEAVE NOW" evacuation order at 5:35 a.m. Friday for Waialua and Haleiwa: "Extremely dangerous flooding and Wahiawa Dam is high."
Officials are warning of life-threatening flood conditions. Dam levels have been high since a storm last week dumped heavy rain across the state, resulting in catastrophic flooding that washed away roads and homes. After the worst of it, a similar but weaker storm was forecast to bring more rain through this weekend.
The National Weather Service in Honolulu issued a flood watch through Sunday afternoon for all islands in Hawaii.

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