- Two people, including a child, dead after Oklahoma tornadoes; governor declares state of emergency
- Build your hurricane season preparedness kits this tax-free weekend
- Residents begin going through the rubble after tornadoes hammer parts of Nebraska and Iowa
- Midwest tornadoes flatten homes in Nebraska suburbs and leave trails of damage in Iowa
- WATCH: Massive tornado caught on camera in Iowa
Charlotte prone to flooding this spring
This week marks North Carolina’s Severe Weather Preparedness Week and on Friday, emergency officials are focusing on the dangers of flash flooding.
“What’s interesting about Mecklenburg County is we have 3000 miles of creeks in our county. That’s like going all the way from east coast to west coast if you put them back to back,” said Char-Meck Storm Water services spokesman John Wendel.
And all the rain Charlotte’s seen lately will make flooding even more dangerous this spring.
“You don’t need as much rain to cause the flooding,” Wendel said.
RELATED: Mother of 1-year-old swept away by floodwaters charged with involuntary manslaughter
RELATED: New evacuations ordered because of Florence flooding
RELATED: This man waded a mile and a half through floodwaters for love, cigarettes
RELATED: As the Florence floodwaters rose, he contemplated taking his life. Then rescuers came.
Specifically, Wendel is talking about flash flooding.
“It rains, the water comes up, but when the rain stops, it goes down pretty quick,” Wendel said.
Click here to find out if your home is located in a flood plain.