What are my risks?
Do I live in a flood prone
area?
For
information on flooding in your neighborhood, refer to a Flood
Insurance Rate Map (FIRM). These maps are computed water
surface elevations that are combined with topographic mapping
data to develop flood hazard maps. They provide information
on areas subject to flooding. They are used to guide future
development away from flood-prone areas and to regulate development
that is proposed to occur within such areas.
Even
so, updates to these maps have not kept up with development
in Maui County. Each year, numerous properties not officially
mapped as “flood prone” are flooded.
Call
your Flood Coordinator (587-0248) for information about flooding.
Or, ask your regional librarian to see the Flood Insurance Rate
Map for your community.
Where have stream floods
been recorded in Kauai County?
Click
here to download an image map of high waves.
Click
to enlarge Stream flooding on Kauai is characterized by numerous
flash floods as well as prolonged flooding associated with slowly
passing rainstorms that saturate the soils. Kauai, famous as
one of the wettest places on Earth, receives between 20 and
80 inches of annual rainfall along the coast and more than 400
inches at the higher elevations of Mt. Waialeale Flash floods
resulting from a storm on December 14, 1991 that dropped over
20 inches of rain in 12 hours over Anahola, caused five deaths,
intense flooding, bank failures, erosion, and slides, totaling
more than $5 million in property damages. During recent recorded
history, such events are not uncommon. On January 24-25 1956,
42 inches of rain fell in 30 hours on the northeast side of
Kauai leading to 10 ft of floodwaters in the streams between
Kilauea and Anahola. The Hanalei River, which most directly
drains the wettest region of Mt. Waialeale, overflows its banks
at the coast nearly every year. Some years are considerably
more damaging than others, for example, November 1955, January
1956, April 1994, and September 1996. In September of 1996 for
instance, 9 inches of rain were recorded in 12 hours along the
coast, and an uncertain amount fell in the uplands. This event
led to flooding of Hanalei town and temporary closure of the
Hanalei Bridge, the residents' sole access to the rest of the
island. In the western portion of Kauai, the flooding hazard
is primarily due to overland flows, especially after storms.
Waimea River, for example, has a long record of flooding dating
back to 1916 and includes numerous occasions where its channels
overflowed after storm-fed precipitation in Waimea Canyon above.
The challenge to mitigating the hazard due to stream flooding
is in large part one of obtaining adequate warning in the case
of flash floods and in improved planning of developments in
areas of known flood history.
Where have high waves been
recorded on Maui?
Click
here to download an image map of high waves.
High
waves can damage life and property, even inundate far inland.
Because of Hawaii's isolation, and the lack of inhabited islands
north of Kauai, the magnitude and threat of high waves from
north swell is often only recognized as the waves crash upon
Kauai's shores. New technologies, including offshore wave sensors,
are helping to provide adequate warning to approaching high
waves with damaging potential. The largest wave events occurred
on the north shore due to strong storms in the north Pacific
(e.g., December 1985, February 1993, November 1996, and January
1998). They were associated with beach erosion and overwash
of coastal property and, in the case of the November 1996 event,
20-25 foot waves and a high tide swept a rental home off of
its foundation. The west shore on average sees waves of 15-20
feet each year, but occasionally there are waves as large as
40 feet (e.g., February 1986). Wave heights of 8-12 feet occasionally
reach the south and southwest shore. Hurricanes have generated
the highest wave heights along the south and east-facing shores.
Waves ranging 20-30 feet were associated with Hurricanes Nina
(1957), Iwa (1982), and Iniki (1992) along the south coast near
Poipu. Run up of ~29 feet above sea level was recorded during
Hurricane Iniki, which left a debris line more than 800 feet
inland of the shoreline. Waves as high as 15-20 feet were reported
along Kauai's east shores during Hurricanes Iwa and Iniki.
Source: Fletcher, Charles, Eric Grossman, Bruce
Richmond. Atlas of Natural Hazards in the Hawaiian Coastal Zone.
2000.