News

Flooding caused the Nolichucky Dam near Greeneville in Greene County to withstand nearly twice the water flow of the iconic Niagara Falls, the Tennessee Department of Transportation said two days ...
Greene County in East Tennessee is slowly chipping away at restoring access to clean water after its water treatment facility had major damage from Hurricane Helene and subsequent flooding.
GREENE COUNTY, Tennessee — The Kinser Bridge, which connects parts of Greene County, has reopened to traffic months after it collapsed in September from flooding due to Hurricane Helene. On Friday ...
Parts of Greene County are without water after flooding from the Nolichucky River ... the University of Tennessee Agriculture Research and Education Center, Caney Branch VFD and Scepter on ...
GREENE COUNTY, Tenn. (WJHL ... morning that every bridge that crosses the Nolichucky River is closed as Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT) crews assess structural stability and ...
He also said there had “never been a flood like this ... as Douglas Lake. In Greene County, Nolichucky Dam is reportedly “stable and secure,” according to Tennessee Valley Authority ...
The Tennessee Valley Authority ... The worst flooding happened Sept. 27 in areas where TVA does not control flooding, such as Cocke County, Unicoi County and Washington County.
Tennessee Wildlife Resources ... The areas are on the Nolichucky River in Greene County, which saw record flows during Helene in late September, causing flooding. Since then, TWRA crews have ...
Overnight Saturday, about 100,000 east Tennessee residents were told to seek higher ground as the Nolichucky Dam in Greene County was on the brink of failure. A flash flood warning in Cocke ...
TENNESSEE (WCYB) — Eleven people have been confirmed dead in East Tennessee after the Helene flooding and 23 ... that two are dead in Cocke County, one in Greene County, one in Knox County ...
East Tennessee and its mountainous terrain are a maze of rivers controlled by dams. Floods from Hurricane Helene tore through them and caused massive destruction as the water brought down roads ...