City crews, neighbors prevent flood damage

Projects await funding to stop stormwater issues

Heavy rain last week spurred City of Sequim staff and residents to place sand bags and pump out inundated areas south of U.S. Highway 101 and in the city’s biggest park.

Sequim public works director David Garlington said that on Feb. 6 neighborhoods off East Silberhorn Road and the Seabreeze Apartments off McCurdy Road experienced high water that threatened structures.

“We were able to keep the water out of apartments,” he said.

Carrie Blake Community Park also experienced high water.

“We did some work to protect some of our own buildings (there),” Garlington said.

A day prior, Gov. Jay Inslee issued an emergency proclamation for 19 counties — including Clallam and Jefferson — because of forecasted storms. Rainfall reached about 2.7 inches in the Sequim area from Feb. 4-10.

In the city’s southwest corner, water came from Burnt Mountain and collected at multiple areas culminating to Falcon Road-area properties off Silberhorn Road migrating water to the northeast, Garlington said.

“It was an excess of water,” he said. “There’s not much up there to stop that water.”

Water enveloped roadways on Rolling Hills Way and Petal Lane.

City crews stayed with one home and its owners through the night helping pump water out of their flooded backyard. They also placed “high water” signs and provided some sand bags for neighbors.

Garlington said it hasn’t always been a city practice to help to that extent.

“The feeling I have and many on the city staff have is that we’re a community and we’re going to help when the community needs help,” he said.

A few weeks ago, city crews battled snow by running five consecutive 24-hour shifts during the snowstorm that brought 5.6 to 8 inches to the Sequim area.

Support projects

City staff continue to wait for an approximate $1.3 million grant award from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) for a stormwater inception project.

Garlington said it’s a city project in Clallam County to prevent flooding in Sequim. It would collect water from west of Happy Valley Road and help it infiltrate into the county’s proposed Dungeness Off-Channel Reservoir near the Dungeness River.

The proposed county project received a $4.1 million grant from the Department of Ecology last year to purchase acreage and help design the $25 million-$30 million reservoir to capture winter river flows for irrigation, to help conserve water and to help migrating salmonids.

Ann Soule, the City of Sequim’s resource manager, previously said the project would recharge the aquifer and prevent flooding in the city.

She said the FEMA grant process is long and began a few years ago, but they finalized their paperwork last summer.

Garlington said the earliest the project would go to bid is 2021 because the city must wait for the Department of Natural Resources to transfer its land to the county for the off-channel reservoir.

He said they cannot send stormwater to infiltrate the property until the agreement occurs.

Soule said the county already agreed to allow the stormwater infiltration to occur once the transfer is complete.

Approved housing developments like the 97-home Legacy Ridge south of South Seventh Avenue faced stormwater issues due to the top later being glacier sill not allowing water to soak in, Garlington said.

He said the developer will need to punch through the sill to help it drain better, and that nearby homeowners may need to do the same for excess water to soak in.

City staff plan to use a $339,117 Department of Ecology grant to fix some flooding issues across the city including at the Seventh Avenue/Washington Street intersection.

Soule said part of the funds will help expand the infiltration area at the intersection.

City staff are designing the project this winter and spring and it will be completed before the grant expires in June 2021.

For more information about city projects, visit www.sequimwa.gov or call 360-683-4908.

Editor’s note: Reporter Matthew Nash lives near one of the neighborhoods affected by flooding.

Above: Neighbors dug a trench and placed a sump pump to redirect waters from a Sequim home’s crawlspace on 
Feb. 6 and 7. Right: City of Sequim staff consult late on Feb. 6 about options to resolve flooding issues off Rolling Hills Way in Sequim. Crews brought in a pump and sand bags to take out and keep water out of the home’s crawlspace. Sequim Gazette photos by Matthew Nash

Above: Neighbors dug a trench and placed a sump pump to redirect waters from a Sequim home’s crawlspace on Feb. 6 and 7. Right: City of Sequim staff consult late on Feb. 6 about options to resolve flooding issues off Rolling Hills Way in Sequim. Crews brought in a pump and sand bags to take out and keep water out of the home’s crawlspace. Sequim Gazette photos by Matthew Nash