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Home Local news Unprecedented Washington Floods Prompt Heroic Rescues Amid Historic Rainfall
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Unprecedented Washington Floods Prompt Heroic Rescues Amid Historic Rainfall

    Historic rains and flooding trigger dramatic rescues in Washington state
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    Rhapsody Of Realities 13 December 2025: Boldness By The Spirit
    Published on 13 December 2025
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    • and,
    • Bob Ferguson,
    • Bruce Bosch,
    • Climate,
    • Donald Trump,
    • dramatic,
    • Environment,
    • Flooding,
    • Frank Cain Jr.,
    • historic,
    • Mario Rincón,
    • Mike Lumpkin,
    • Rains,
    • rescues,
    • Robert Ezelle,
    • State,
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    • U.S. news,
    • washington
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    BURLINGTON, Wash. – On a seemingly ordinary night, Eddie Wicks and his wife settled down to sleep in their cozy home next to the Snoqualmie River. Their Washington state farm is renowned for its sunflower mazes and festive Christmas trees. Having lived in Duvall for 30 years, a city northeast of Seattle, they had seen their share of floods and believed they were well-prepared for the rising waters.

    However, this time proved different. As they moved their two donkeys to higher ground and found temporary shelter for their eight goats in an outdoor kitchen, the water began to surge at an alarming rate—faster than they had ever witnessed.

    “It was hours, not days,” Eddie recounted. “In four hours, it had to come up 4 feet.”

    By Thursday afternoon, the floodwaters had overtaken their home. It was then that the King County Sheriff’s Office marine rescue dive unit intervened. They managed to evacuate Eddie, his wife, and their dog, navigating a boat across what used to be their field but was now a vast, makeshift lake stretching half a mile (800 meters).

    The Wicks family was not alone in their plight. They were among thousands compelled to evacuate as a powerful atmospheric river released over a foot (30 centimeters) of rain across parts of western and central Washington. The deluge swelled rivers, inundating communities and leading to perilous rescues from rooftops and submerged vehicles.

    Although the record-setting floodwaters were expected to slowly recede by Saturday, officials cautioned that water levels would stay high for days. The potential for levee breaches or mudslides still posed a significant threat, compounded by the forecast of additional rain on Sunday.

    Still, no deaths have been reported.

    Authorities have yet to estimate the costs, but photos and videos show widespread damage, with entire communities or neighborhoods flooded around western and central Washington. Officials have conducted dozens of water rescues, debris and mudslides have closed highways, and raging torrents have washed out roads and bridges.

    President Donald Trump has signed the state’s request for an emergency declaration, Washington Gov. Bob Ferguson said.

    Officials issued “go now” orders Wednesday to tens of thousands of residents in the Skagit River flood plain north of Seattle, including the farming city of Burlington, home to nearly 10,000 people. By Friday morning, muddy water overflowed a slough and rushed into homes, prompting more urgent warnings for Burlington.

    The rain arriving Sunday will cause rivers to rise again, said Robert Ezelle, director of the Washington Military Department’s emergency management division.

    National Guard fans out to help with evacuations

    National Guard members knocked on hundreds of doors in Burlington early Friday to tell residents about the evacuation notice and help transport them to a shelter. By late morning the evacuation order was lifted for part of the city and waters were slowly receding.

    The Skagit River drains a wide swath of the rugged Cascade Range before winding west across broad, low-lying farmlands and tulip fields on its way to Puget Sound. Cities like Burlington sit on that delta, leaving them especially vulnerable to floods.

    The river crested overnight Thursday into Friday at 37 feet (11.2 meters) in the valley’s biggest city, Mount Vernon, surpassing the previous record by a few inches. A flood wall held fast and protected the downtown area.

    About 1,000 Burlington residents had to evacuate in the middle of the night, Ferguson said. The water was reportedly 2 to 3 feet (60 to 90 centimeters) deep in certain areas as it flooded homes, police department spokesperson Michael Lumpkin said.

    Mario Rincón had been staying at a hotel with his family, including a week-old infant. They returned to their Burlington property Friday but couldn’t get inside, as murky floodwaters reached part-way up the first floor.

    “It’s going to be a few days before the water recedes,” he said.

    Near the U.S.-Canada border, Sumas, Nooksack and Everson — which together have about 6,500 residents — were inundated. The border crossing at Sumas was closed.

    In a social media message, Sumas Mayor Bruce Bosch acknowledged community members were anxious to return to their homes.

    “Hang in there,” he wrote.

    In King County, crews worked through the night to fill a sinkhole on a levee along the Green River in the Seattle suburb of Tukwila, County Executive Girmay Zahilay said Friday.

    Crews reach people by boat and by helicopter

    Authorities across the state in recent days have rescued people from cars and homes.

    Helicopters rescued two families on Thursday from the roofs of homes in Sumas that had been flooded, according Frank Cain Jr., battalion chief for Whatcom County Fire District 14.

    Near Deming, two homes collapsed into the Nooksack River as erosion undercut them. No one was inside at the time.

    Climate change has been linked to some intense rainfall. Scientists say that without specific study they cannot directly link a single weather event to climate change, but in general it’s responsible for more intense and more frequent extreme storms, droughts, floods and wildfires.

    ___

    Rush reported from Portland, Oregon, and Golden from Seattle. Associated Press writers Gene Johnson in Seattle and Corey Williams in Detroit contributed to this report.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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