Between 300 and 700 Homes Damaged Along Lake Delhi

By Patrick Hogan, Reporter

Surrounded by ruined possessions Virgie Menge, of Cascade, cleans dishes that were in the cupboard of her summer home in the Freddy's Beach area of Lake Delhi in Delaware County on Sunday, July 25, 2010. Menge said she lived at the summer home for 45 years and had never seen anything like this. Her and her family had moved stuff up on tables, but it wasn't enough. She was, however, able to save pictures, photo albums, and the boats. (Julie Koehn/SourceMedia Group News)

Tools

By Tracey McCullough

A flood three years ago ruined some of the items Lake Delhi resident Max Anderson kept in a shed behind his lake-side home of 50 years. To make sure that didn’t happen again this year, he loaded all of the objects from the shed into a pickup truck in his home’s garage to keep them safe from the water.

On Sunday morning, Anderson took stock of the damage to the items in his flooded garage, as the shed lay upside-down on the beach in the aftermath of a devastating flood in the Lake Delhi area.

“The water got high enough to go over the top of the pickup,” he said. “I lived here since 1962 and had my 80th birthday three days ago. It has never flooded like this.”

Anderson is just one of many homeowners with lake-side houses with extensive damage after heavy rainfalls caused the Lake Delhi water level to rise to unprecedented heights.

Bob Manning, of Waterloo, was helping his mother-in-law clean out her summer home off 22 years and said that no one ever expected the lake to rise as high or as fast as it did.

“I have lots of friends in Delhi who always say that water-in would be water-out and that there never would be a flooding problem,” Manning said. “Even yesterday when the water was going up, we kept saying, ‘It can’t go any higher.’”

The water level finally began to recede after the breach of the Lake Delhi Dam, which was built in 1922 to create the lake. It left behind homes with ruined carpets, moldy walls and destroyed personal effects.

“It’s gone,” said Michelle Miller of Dubuque about her family’s cabin. “We had water underneath the cabin, water inside the cabin, the whole underneath of the cabin is ruined, the insulation is ruined and the front part of the cabin is sinking.”

The extent of the damage still was unclear on Sunday, according to Lake Delhi Recreation Association President Jim Willey.

Homes damaged

Between 300 and 700 homes along Lake Delhi sustained flood damage this weekend, estimates Jack Klaus, a spokesman for Delaware County Emergency Management.

A number of residences are weekend or vacation cabins and, as such, likely will not qualify for assistance from the federal government.

Gov. Chet Culver and other state officials, traveling throughout Delaware and Buchanan counties on Sunday, said they will investigate the possibility of low-interest loans to those who lost their homes and cabins.

Meanwhile, Delaware County Emergency Management was advising flood victims to take pictures of flood damage and document their situation by making notes. They should call their insurance agents, too.

Delaware County Emergency Management is asking those with flood damage to e-mail this information to macc@manchesteriuowa.org: name, address, phone number and five or six words damages. Put “Flood Damage” in the subject line.

Delaware County Emergency Management Director Mike Ryan will be compiling a list of damaged properties to be used in talks with FEMA and other assistance programs.

Ryan said program rules have changed so even if property owners have been through flooding before, they should file information so they can be contacted and possibly qualify for assistance.

Also, public health officials advised those in flooded areas not to drink or cook with well water and to use bottled water. They also should use insect repellent to guard against mosquitoes that could be carrying the West Nile virus.

Conversation Guidelines

Be Kind

Don't use abusive, offensive, threatening, racist, vulgar or sexually-oriented language.
Don't attack someone personally. Keep it civil and be responsible.

Share Knowledge

Be truthful. Share what you know and what you are passionate about.
What more do you want to learn? Keep it simple.

Stay focused

Promote lively and healthy debate. Stay on topic. Ask questions and give feedback on the story's topic.

Report Trouble

Help us maintain a quality comment section by reporting comments that are offensive. If you see a comment that is offensive, or you feel violates our guidelines, simply click on the "x" to the far right of the comment to report it.


read the full guidelines here »

Commenting will be disabled on stories dealing with the following subject matter: Violent crime, sexual abuse, Amber Alerts, Operation Quickfinds and suicides.

More Good Stuff

What's On KCRG