3 dead, hundreds evacuated in Colorado flooding

Emergency personnel work to rescue a man trapped in his vehicle during flooding of Rock Creek in Lafayette, Colorado.
Tribune staff and wire reports
10:39 a.m. CDT, September 12, 2013
BOULDER, Colo.,—
Flooding in Colorado left three people dead, prompted hundreds to be evacuated, caused building collapses and stranded cars, officials said on Thursday.
One person died when a home collapsed outside Boulder and another body was found in Colorado Springs, about 100 miles to the south, officials said.
The third death was confirmed at a press conference, when Boulder County Sheriff Joe Pelle confirmed that a body had been recovered in the 200 block of Linden Road in north Boulder at an unconfirmed time on Thursday morning.
A Boulder County Office of Emergency Management spokesman said conditions were "extremely dangerous" and up to 4 inches of additional rain was expected on Thursday.
"There is water everywhere," said the spokesman, Andrew Barth. "We've had several structural collapses, there's m&d and muck and debris everywhere. Cars are stranded all over the place."
The National Weather Service has issued a flash flood warning for central Boulder County. Overnight, a separate flash flood warning was issued for southeastern Colorado.
Emergency crews searching door-to-door in Jamestown outside Boulder, found one body while evacuating residents who were stranded in canyons above the city, Barth said. The body of a man was recovered in Colorado Springs by police on flood watch foot patrols, the city's fire department said in a statement.
The University of Colorado's Boulder campus evacuated more than 400 students from ground-floor campus housing overnight, said Ryan Huff, a spokesman for the campus police.
University spokesman Bronson Hilliard said the Athens and Newton Court buildings were evacuated because of flooding on the Boulder Creek. The evacuation displaced graduate students, faculty, staff and their families.
The flood also forced the American Red Cross to relocate an evacuation shelter in Boulder. The previous shelter was at the North Boulder Recreation Center, but it has now closed, said Red Cross spokeswoman Patricia Demchak Billinger.
"The move was made due to concern over rising water affecting access to and safety of the original site on Broadway," Bilinger said.
As of 2 a.m., no evacuees had checked in to the new site at the YMCA.
Reuters and KDVR