![]() ![]() Thanks to the support of the Thriving Earth Exchange of the American Geophysical Union, Gayle will soon be matched with a pro bono scientist who can help her explore and advocate for green infrastructure solutions to the flooding. We must do all that we can for both our ancestors and our descendants to protect historic Ellicott City.’”Ĭoncrete waste dumped by West End Service on to hillside between parking lot and Hudson Branch kills vegetation, erodes north bank, and falls into channel. In March 2021, “Howard County Executive Calvin Ball announced changes to the Ellicott City Safe & Sound plan that would extend the North Tunnel, eliminating the need for the previously planned flood mitigation projects for the West End of Ellicott City…The extended North Tunnel also negates the need for any building removal on the West End, saving at least nine buildings previously slated for demolition.”īusiness owner, “Angie Tersiguel stated, ‘We all play a significant part in the respected and admired legacy that is Ellicott City. Ellicott City Flood Solutions advocated for a way to keep the buildings and their persistence worked. The historic buildings of Ellicott city are part of its fiber and hold the stories within their walls. Residents were horrified at this solution. In addition, they want to remove four historic buildings that sit atop one flood-prone stream and remove the backs of six others sitting in the floodplain.” Bay Journal, August 2020 When friends or family have asked her why she stays, she says, “I tell them this place is worth sticking around and working for.” And work she did.īy August 2020, “County officials…proposed more and larger culverts to keep streams from overflowing their banks and also a large tunnel so floodwaters will bypass the strip of shops, eateries, offices and homes. Gayle Killen had lived in her home in Ellicott City since 2010 and has survived three floods. ![]() Gayle Killen in her I Flood and I Vote t-shirt. In her article for Strong Towns, Mary Catherine Walter notes, “These two recent floods were unique… because instead of flowing up from an overfilled river, the water flooded downhill towards the Patapsco from where the Tiber River and other tributaries converge.” The residents of the city felt numb facing the unthinkable destruction of everything they had rebuilt. Then, less than two years later, with repairs and renovations nearly finished from 2016, another flash flood event devastated Ellicott City on with 8 inches of rain. Overall, the economic hit totaled $67.2 million to businesses.” (BizJournals, May 28, 2015) “The 2016 flood killed two people, damaged 90 businesses on historic Main Street and left the Howard County landmark with more than $22 million in damages. On July, 30, 2016, a one in 1,000-year flood event, dumping over 6 inches of rain in two hours, turned the city into a disaster zone. Ellicott City, Maryland made the news in a way that no city wants to, more than once. ![]()
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