50,000 San Jose residents under flood evacuation orders

ByMatt Keller, Amy Hollyfield and Jessica Castro KGO logo
Wednesday, February 22, 2017
50,000 San Jose residents under flood evacuation orders
New mandatory evacuations have been issued in San Jose as flooding continues to spread along Coyote Creek. The city estimates 14,000 residents are in the mandatory evacuation zone.

SAN JOSE, Calif. -- New mandatory evacuations have been issued overnight in San Jose as flooding continues to spread along Coyote Creek.



The Emergency Operations Center says 36,000 people in San Jose are in the recommended area for evacuations, and 14,000 are in the mandatory evacuation area.



There are 346 people who have been rescued by boat, 250 of those rescues occurred yesterday and 96 were last night.



The new order went out just after midnight in the area along Coyote Creek in the Coyote Creek 100 year Flood Zone, running from north I-280 to south Highway 101.



The flooding has also triggered the closure of Highway 101 in San Jose between I-880 and and the I-280/I-680 split. There is no estimate when lanes will reopen.



Several schools in the mandatory evacuation area in San Jose will be closed on Wednesday. The schools are: San Jose High School, Cristo Rey San Jose Jesuit High School, Rocketship Discovery Prep, Empire Gardens Elementary, McKinley Elementary, Olinder Elementary and Gavilan College (impacting all five campuses).



Tuesday night, evacuations were ordered for the entire area along Coyote Creek north of Interstate 280 and South of 237. They expanded the mandatory evacuation order to nearly all residents East of Coyote Creek and West of Highway 101, except for the Bonita neighborhood.



Click here to see a map of emergencies in the area.



On Tuesday, San Jose firefighters rescued more than 200 residents by boat in flood waters in the Rockspring neighborhood at Senter and Phelan. Water rescue teams used boats and other vehicles to go door-to-door and pull residents to safety. Anyone who has come into contact with the murky brown water is being decontaminated because of fears about overflowing sewage lines, oil and gas from vehicles trapped in the water or household chemicals that might have leaked into the flood waters.



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Sky7 shows a car immersed in floodwater on Tuesday, Feb. 21, 2017 (left) and again on Wednesday, Feb. 22, 2017 (right), when floodwaters receded in San Jose, Calif.
KGO-TV

No significant injuries have been reported so far.



Residents say the water was moving so quickly they had no time to prepare.



"I know we lost a lot of photos. I had a lot of my clothes down there from the winter that I like to store. I know I had a lot of shoes. I had all my baby's toys, all of his stuff down there," said Gabriela Martinez, a Rockspring resident



"Early morning around nine, I move the car. Yeah, pretty fast, 15 minutes, the water go up to here, earlier it's only like four inch, 15 minutes later about a foot deep," said Dui Nguyen, a San Jose resident.



"Run out try to get my wife and my kid out. They are up in that apartment. They're trying to get out," said Nguyen.



ABC7 cameras were rolling when Nguyen's wife and son were rescued by fire officials.



"There seems to have been a unique breach of some sort, and obviously that's something we're going to be sorting out in the days ahead. Our focus right now is on ensuring that these residents are safe," said Sam Liccardo, the Mayor of San Jose.



An overnight shelter opened at James Lick High School, on 57 N. White Road. It is being operated by the Red Cross and the city's Department of Parks, Recreation and Neighborhood Services.



MORE: Resources from the Red Cross



Residents can take their pets to the San Jose Animal Shelter for safekeeping. The animal shelter is located at 2750 Monterey Road, San Jose.



To report downed trees and flooding, call (408) 794-1900.

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