Carroll County announces mandatory evacuations after release of water at Dix Dam
As a result, parts of Carroll County are under mandatory evacuation, including Prestonville, Greensbottom, Happy Hollow and Blue Lick, according to information from Mike Ratliff, the Carroll County Emergency Management Director.
Carrollton Mayor Robb Adams said in a Facebook live he'd been told by the Kentucky Emergency Management office that 10 gates at Dix Dam had been accidentally opened and were not able to be closed.
But the Henry County Emergency Management said the dam was opened as 'a planned event' because Harrington Lake was full, and water needed to be released.
'If you're on the Kentucky River corridor anywhere, and you're seeing this video, you need to evacuate,' Adams said. 'You need to evacuate immediately.'
Kentucky Utilities spokesman Daniel Lowry confirmed the release of water was intentional, adding the spill gates had been opened 'in a controlled fashion' since Friday evening, 'and everything has been going per procedures.'
'Flow into Herrington Lake has subsided starting this (Sunday) morning and we are in the process of closing gates tonight,' Lowry said.
Franklin County Judge-Executive Michael Mueller echoed similar statements in an update posted to Facebook, calling Adams' statements 'misinformation' and saying all water released from Dix Dam was done so intentionally.
'They are not releasing 20 feet (of water), they are not opening 10 gates,' Mueller said. 'Everything they are doing has been planned, has been approved by Emergency Management.'
In an interview with the Herald-Leader, Adams confirmed he'd talked to the emergency management office around noon Sunday, and to his knowledge, the gates at Dix Dam haven't been closed or cannot be closed. The emergency management office warned it could bring higher water than ever recorded along the Kentucky River, he said.
Dix Dam is located between Mercer and Garrard counties, about 80 miles from Carrollton, and is operated by Kentucky Utilities. KU did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The Kentucky River starts near Beattyville in Lee County and flows northwest, joining the Ohio River in Carrollton, according to the Encyclopedia Brittanica.
In an emergency notice from Carroll County, residents were warned that if they do not evacuate, the county may not be able to assist them as water levels rise.
'The state has advised that the impacts of this major release are unprecedented and unpredictable,' the notice said. 'All we know for sure is that this is going to impact our area in a major way.'
Carrollton is located where the Kentucky and Ohio rivers meet, both of which have experienced large amounts of flooding in the aftermath of days of near-constant rain. The Kentucky River is expected to rise to record-setting levels in the coming days.
Carrollton is about halfway between Cincinnati's Northern Kentucky counties and metro Louisville.
'This is a significant threat that should be taken seriously,' the notice reads. 'If you fail to evacuate, there is no guarantee in that resources exist that will provide for your rescue. This is a high-impact event and should be taken as a life-threatening emergency.'
In the Facebook video, Adams urged residents to take the warning seriously and to not try and 'ride this out.'
'It exceeds expectations, it exceeds any gauges or any data that they have in past history, ever,' Adams said.
Adams told the Herald-Leader he was warned by the emergency management office 'there is no data on file to support what we might get.'
'We don't expect a wave or a wall, or something you can physically see happening, but it will be a rapid rise and is not expected to crest until Tuesday sometime,' Adams said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


News24
3 days ago
- News24
Durban beach clip wrongly shared as Russian tsunami disaster
Screencapture/YouTube An 8.8-magnitude quake hit Russia's Kamchatka peninsula on 30 July, sparking tsunami warnings across the Pacific. A viral video falsely claimed to show waves from the quake, but was filmed in Durban years earlier. 'A powerful tsunami hits Russia, sea waves over 13 feet high enter Russia,' reads a Sinhala-language Facebook post shared hours after the 8.8 magnitude jolt struck off the coast of Russia's Kamchatka peninsula (archived link). The tremor was the region's strongest since 1952, the regional seismic monitoring service said. Storm surges of up to four metres (12 feet) were predicted for some parts of the Pacific with more than a dozen nations - from Japan to the United States to Ecuador - evacuating citizens from coastal regions. The warnings were later lifted, allowing millions of temporary evacuees to return home. The only reported fatality was a woman killed when her car fell off a cliff in Japan as she tried to escape, local media reported. The post featured a video of waves crashing onto the shore as people flee from the beach. Similar posts were also shared by users from India, Pakistan, and the Philippines but the footage does not show a tsunami hitting Russia. A reverse image search on Google surfaced multiple YouTube posts sharing the clip in March 2017 (archived here and here). The posts say it shows a beach in the coastal city of Durban. Screencapture/AFP Local media outlets eNCA and Southlands Sun reported that the beaches were closed due to the high tides at the time (archived here and here). Using details from the news reports, AFP was able to confirm the location of the video by comparing it with Google Maps street imagery of a beach in Durban.
Yahoo
5 days ago
- Yahoo
Stepping up to help: Area districts providing school supplies this year
Some area schools have made the decision to provide their students all school supplies for the 2025-2026 school year. Veribest ISD, a school nearly 12 miles from San Angelo, announced the district has purchased all school supplies for prekindergarten-12th grade for this school year due to the recent flooding. The July 4 flooding severely impacted the area, damaging homes and businesses and displacing residents. "We only ask that students bring their own backpacks," according to a Facebook post from the district. Reagan County ISD in Big Lake also announced it would provide all school supplies for all grades this year. "Parents only need provide a backpack, and lunchbox (if preferred) and/or water bottle (if preferred)," a Facebook post from the district stated. More: Police: All suspects arrested, charged with murder in San Angelo homicide More: Donate school supplies, get discounts at Texas Roadhouse This article originally appeared on San Angelo Standard-Times: Veribest, Reagan County providing all school supplies this year Solve the daily Crossword


USA Today
6 days ago
- USA Today
What makes coastal California's Crescent City so vulnerable to tsunamis?
Crescent City, California, residents are breathing a sigh of relief after its latest tsunami warning was downgraded to an advisory. Crescent City, a redwood-tree lined coastal California community, is known as the tsunami capital of the country. The city has experienced more than three-dozen tsunamis in the last century. Once again, tsunami waves ‒ luckily modest this time ‒ reached the town, peaking as high as 4 feet near city shores before dawn on July 30, according to the National Weather Service. The waves came just hours after an 8.8-magnitude earthquake, one of the strongest tremblors in recorded history, struck off Russia's east coast, prompting tsunami waves in Hawaii and along the West Coast. "It was a long night for all of us. We were fortunate this time," Crescent City Manager Eric Weir said during a morning briefing on July 30. "There was significant tsunami surges. We're still dealing with those now, but it did stay within the banks." The July 29 tsunami warning was initially expected to last as long as 30 hours in Crescent City, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Weir said the waves caused significant damage to a harbor dock as it lifted decking off the pilings, but the rest of the city was spared. "Downtown is at a high enough elevation that it is open," Weir said, about an hour before the tsunami warning was downgraded to an "advisory" for Crescent City, one of the last West Coast communities considered still at risk. City officials still advised locals to stay away from the harbor, beaches and waterways due to continued wave activity. "Conditions have started to improve," city officials said in a Facebook post. "But the ocean is still angry." Coastal calm: Tsunami evacuation orders lifted in Hawaii, threat to West Coast eases Crescent City's deadly tsunami history What makes Crescent City, a town of about 6,700 residents located about 25 miles south of the Oregon border, so tsunami-prone? Crescent City is vulnerable because it is located near the southern end of the Cascadia Subduction Zone, a major fault line capable of producing dangerous tsunamis and intense earthquakes, according to the Pacific Northwest Seismic Network. Several published studies also indicate that a Cascadia Subduction Zone tsunami can cause severe damage and inland flooding. In 2011, the earthquake in Japan spurred waves of more than 8 feet, destroying Crescent City's harbor. "The water went out to a low tide, but each wave was coming back in and it was getting higher and higher," Max Blair, 79, a volunteer at the Del Norte Historical Society located near downtown Crescent City, recalled to USA TODAY on July 30. "The harbor was a whole different story." One man died during the incident as the harbor docks were smashed and dozens of boats sank, causing an estimated $50 million in damage. The harbor was eventually rebuilt as the first "tsunami resistant port" on the West Coast. Another deadly tsunami struck Crescent City in 1964, triggered by a massive earthquake in Alaska, killing 11 people and injuring 35 others. The tsunami destroyed nearly 300 buildings and homes, causing between $11 million and $16 million in damages. The incident is considered one of the most devastating tsunamis in U.S. history. "I've heard and read about it," said Blair who's lived in Crescent City for more than 30 years. "I hope we never get to experience anything like that one."