Bestand:Vicenza flooding Nov.1, 2010.jpg

Pagina-inhoud wordt niet ondersteund in andere talen.
Uit Wikipedia, de vrije encyclopedie

Oorspronkelijk bestand(1.350 × 750 pixels, bestandsgrootte: 921 kB, MIME-type: image/jpeg)


Beschrijving

Beschrijving
English: A police vehicle patrols a flooded street in Vicenza, Italy, Nov. 1, 2010.

U.S. Army photo by Jim McGee

Muddy water surged into homes and business, engulfed local bridges and roads and forced closures on Caserma Ederle and throughout the city of Vicenza and surrounding areas Nov. 1-3.

Caserma Ederle provided the Italian military with 1,200 sandbags Nov. 2 and an additional 4,000 Nov. 3 for use with relief efforts in and around the city. The flooding was due to days of heavy rainfall according to Larry Kilgore, director, Directorate of Plans, Training, Mobilization and Security.

Caserma Ederle officials closed nearly all offices and services on Caserma Ederle early Nov. 1 and for the entire day Nov. 2.

“The Prefect of Vicenza shut down the (city) schools because of the rivers flooding,” Kilgore said. “The Crisis Management Team got together and came up with the decision to shut down the school and the post for safety reasons.”

An estimated 80 percent of those who work on the installation either could not make it to their work place or would have faced two to four hour delays to find alternate routes around flooding, according to the Crisis Management Team’s Nov. 1 meeting notes.

The flooding impacted the Vicenza downtown area, Torri di Quartesolo and Longare greatly, according to Kilgore. “Those areas were hit hard,” he said.

Water also shut down sections of the Autostrada and tangenziale, and numerous bridges and outlying roads. The roads surrounding Caserma Ederle stayed fairly clear, with the exception of high-water in isolated areas.

American residents shared their own flood photos on the USAG Vicenza and AFN Vicenza Facebook pages. AFN reporters posted videos, including those taken with cell phones, to update community members, and Staff Sgt. Alejandro Briceno, AFN Vicenza, was out covering events.

“In one particular location, the water was over its banks on the west side of the river and surrounded an apartment building’s first floor,” Briceno said. “You could see a man in his second floor window looking below at the water. The last time I saw anything like that was when I deployed in support of Hurricane Rita relief efforts.”

Robert Burns, U.S. Army Africa, lives in downtown Vicenza and said four feet of water covered the entrance to his building and half of his car.

“I woke up and my power was off,” Burns said. “Then I looked out the window and saw a river. It was surreal. As the water got higher and higher, I started to wonder what I would do if the levels continued to rise. The water was rushing as fast as the river. It was a little traumatic. The water was rushing so fast that I couldn’t have gotten out if I wanted to.”

Caserma Ederle community members headed to the homes of friends and co-workers, especially in the Torri area, to help families move furniture and clean up, Kilgore said. Other community members helped downtown business owners and residents bail water out from businesses, homes and garages. Kilgore said the Crisis and Consequence Management Teams performed well.

“This helped test our emergency abilities,” Kilgore said. “For instance, emergency essential personnel who work at Longare were able to come to Caserma Ederle to work.”

Throughout the closure, the Shoppettes on Villaggio and main post, the Ederle Inn, the Benincaso Birthing Pavilion and the DFAC remained open. Emergency essential personnel still reported to the Caserma to keep services running.
Datum
Bron originally posted to Flickr as Vicenza flooding Nov.1, 2010
Auteur US Army Africa
Toestemming
(Hergebruik van dit bestand)
This image, which was originally posted to Flickr, was uploaded to Commons using Flickr upload bot on 13 november 2010, 10:11 by FishInWater. On that date, it was confirmed to be licensed under the terms of the license indicated.
w:nl:Creative Commons
naamsvermelding
Dit bestand is gelicenseerd onder de Creative Commons-licentie Naamsvermelding 2.0 Unported
De gebruiker mag:
  • Delen – het werk kopiëren, verspreiden en doorgeven
  • Remixen – afgeleide werken maken
Onder de volgende voorwaarden:
  • naamsvermelding – U moet op een gepaste manier aan naamsvermelding doen, een link naar de licentie geven, en aangeven of er wijzigingen in het werk zijn aangebracht. U mag dit op elke redelijke manier doen, maar niet zodanig dat de indruk wordt gewekt dat de licentiegever instemt met uw werk of uw gebruik van zijn werk.

Bijschriften

Beschrijf in één regel wat dit bestand voorstelt

Items getoond in dit bestand

beeldt af

Bestandsgeschiedenis

Klik op een datum/tijd om het bestand te zien zoals het destijds was.

Datum/tijdMiniatuurAfmetingenGebruikerOpmerking
huidige versie13 nov 2010 12:11Miniatuurafbeelding voor de versie van 13 nov 2010 12:111.350 × 750 (921 kB)Flickr upload botUploaded from http://flickr.com/photo/36281822@N08/5157191333 using Flickr upload bot

Dit bestand wordt op de volgende 2 pagina's gebruikt:

Globaal bestandsgebruik

De volgende andere wiki's gebruiken dit bestand:

Metadata