Flood News Wrote:
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> Heavy rains make for busy night for Sterling
> Volunteer Fire and Rescue Friday, Sep. 9 by Jana
> Wagoner
>
http://www.loudountimes.com/index.php/news/article
> /heavy_rains_make_for_busy_night_for_sterling_volu
> nteer_fire_and_rescue345/
>
> The constant rains for the past few days caused
> flash flooding conditions in and around Loudoun
> Sept. 8, making Sterling Volunteer Fire workers
> very busy in the eastern part of the county.
>
> Friday evening at about 5 p.m., the Sterling crew
> along with Loudoun County career fire and rescue
> workers were called to a stranded motorist who got
> caught in high water heading east on Route 7at the
> Sugarland Creek crossing in Dranesville. The
> firefighters had to perform a swift water rescue.
>
> According to Sterling Volunteer Fire president
> David Short, it took crews about 20 minutes to
> assess the situation and rescue the woman who was
> stranded in her car. Short said that by 7 p.m.,
> the car had floated up against a guardrail on the
> side of Route 7.
>
> Then, at about 8:30 p.m., crews were called to
> rescue a dog from a storm drain near the
> intersection of Great Falls Forest Drive and Falls
> Forest Place.
>
> According to Short, the dog got swept into the
> drain and was carried through an underground pipe
> into a large culvert. The dog’s owners attempted
> a rescue, then called Loudoun County Animal
> Control officers to come help. Animal Control
> ended up calling Sterling Volunteer Fire for
> assistance.
>
> Firefighters and Animal Control workers placed
> ropes on the dog to lift him out of the culvert.
>
> “The dog escaped without injury and was reunited
> to his very happy family,” Short said.
>
> “The dog was really lucky,” he added.
>
> Short called Friday night’s flooding conditions
> “highly unusual” for the area. He said that
> Sterling is used to seeing the residual effects
> from floods of the Potomac and Shenandoah rivers
> to the west but not so much the flash floods that
> happened Sept. 8 where water was rising rapidly,
> then fell in a short time span.
>
> He said the whole flooding event only lasted
> between six and eight hours, then was over.
>
> No deaths were reported in Loudoun County from the
> weather, but two people died in nearby Fairfax
> County after being carried away in swift waters.
>
>