flood, Nashville and Middle Tennessee
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The Tennessean |
This current rain event is expected to bring 'generational flooding', which only happens once a generation. But memories of 2010 flood still plague some.
USA Today |
Flash flooding is the biggest worry for TDOT and Nashville road and emergency crews.
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Communities in Middle and West Tennessee are hunkering down as severe weather and inches of rain are expected through the weekend.
TDOT reduced impassable roads from 49 to 44 after Hurricane Helene, with a key section of I-40 partially reopened.
Six months since Hurricane Helene made landfall, locking in a course for East Tennessee, communities across the area are continuing to rebuild.
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WATE 6 On Your Side on MSNFive Tennessee roads remain closed six months after Helene as recovery continuesSix months after Hurricane Helene devastated parts of East Tennessee and western North Carolina, I-40 has partially reopened and 44 of the 49 sections of state roads have reopened, but five road
A report from the Tennessee Occupational Safety and Health Administration says workers at an East Tennessee plastics company who died in flooding from Hurricane Helene had time to evacuate.
Yet again, another round of severe weather is set to threaten the central U.S. with damaging winds, large hail and tornadoes starting late Tuesday and continuing through Thursday.
Thursday marks 6 months since the devastating floodwaters from Helene swept through parts of East Tennessee, Southwest
Thursday, March 27 will mark six months to the day since Hurricane Helene made landfall, moving through East Tennessee and causing unprecedented destruction and taking several lives.
FEMA gave its final recovery update on Friday, but said federal, state and local teams would continue working to help Tennessee communities impacted by the storm.
The risk is spread throughout Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland, northern Georgia and extreme western portions of North Carolina and South Carolina.