I mistook this for 'old news' – these are new floods
Venice
'high water' floods 70% of city
Venetians
direct anger at forecasters after 'exceptional and unpredictable'
rise in sea waters floods homes and businesses
11
November, 2012
Tourists
attached plastic bags to their legs or stripped off to take a dip in
St Mark's Square in Venice on Sunday as rising sea waters surged
through the lagoon city. High water measuring 1.49 metres (5ft) above
the normal level of the Adriatic sea came with bad weather that swept
Italy at the weekend, causing floods in historic cities including
Vicenza as well in the region of Tuscany 250 miles further south.
Venice's
high water, or "acqua alta", said to be the sixth highest
since 1872, flooded 70% of the city and was high enough to make
raised wooden platforms for pedestrians float away. The record high
water in Venice – 1.94 metres in 1966 – prompted many residents
to abandon the city for new lives on the mainland.
Venetians
bombarded Facebook with moans about the city's weather forecasters,
who had predicted just 1.2 metres of water on Saturday, before
correcting their forecast at dawn on Sunday.
"How
come the people from the council who put out the wooden platforms
were predicting 150cm?" asked Matelda Bottoni, who manages a
jewellery design shop off St Mark's Square, which floods when water
reaches 105cm. "Many residents and shopkeepers had gone to the
mountains for the day and did not have time to rush back."
Bottoni
is so used to floods she has installed waterproof furniture and an
angled floor. "I cannot keep the water out, but at least I can
make sure it goes straight back out when it recedes," she said.
Matteo
Secchi, a hotelier and head of a protest group, who grew up in ground
floor flat in Venice and recalls splashing into water on getting out
of bed, said his hotel was only safe up to 140cm. "This morning
the lagoon came right into the hotel entrance, and this is not clean
water – you need to mop with disinfectant twice after it goes
down," he said. "The British tourists don't complain but
the Americans can't understand how it's possible."
Secchi
complained that a running event around the city had not been
cancelled on Sunday. "As Venetians were trying to fix their
homes and shops, people were running down the flooded streets
splashing everyone with water," he said.
Alessandro
Maggioni, the city's assessor for public works, defended the Venice
weather centre, describing the high water as "exceptional and
unpredictable". The Moses flood barrier system being built to
protect the lagoon, due for completion in 2015, would have kept the
city dry, he said. "Meanwhile, there is no rise in the incidence
of high waters," he said.
Bottoni
disagreed. "My shop now has some form of flooding 100 days a
year, up from 30-40 days when I moved in just 10 years ago." But
she does not plan to leave. "I was born and raised here and will
stay here for the satisfaction of being in Venice."
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