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One killed, one seriously injured in Greeley storm that brought 2-inch hail, flooding

Floodwaters rose as high as 18 inches in eastern part of city

Jared Sughroue looks into his one-year-old son’s bedroom window to see how much the water has receded after he began pumping floodwaters from the basement apartment he rents with his wife and two children in Greeley, Colorado, on May 29, 2024. The apartment, located in a neighborhood southeast of downtown Greeley, flooded after a severe hailstorm moved through the area. Sughroue said he feels fortunate that no one in his family was hurt, but he is upset that they lost almost everything inside the apartment. He estimated that replacing everything would cost around $4,000. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
Jared Sughroue looks into his one-year-old son’s bedroom window to see how much the water has receded after he began pumping floodwaters from the basement apartment he rents with his wife and two children in Greeley, Colorado, on May 29, 2024. The apartment, located in a neighborhood southeast of downtown Greeley, flooded after a severe hailstorm moved through the area. Sughroue said he feels fortunate that no one in his family was hurt, but he is upset that they lost almost everything inside the apartment. He estimated that replacing everything would cost around $4,000. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
DENVER, CO - OCTOBER 03: Denver Post reporter Jessica Seaman. (Photo By Patrick Traylor/The Denver Post)DENVER, CO - OCTOBER 10: Denver Post reporter Katie Langford. (Photo By Patrick Traylor/The Denver Post)
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Update 12:28 p.m. June 4, 2024: Weld County officials identified the man found dead outside after a hailstorm pelted Greeley on May 28 as 48-year-old Joseph Rosendo Henry Carrisales.

Carrisales was found dead outside on the property of a friend’s home in the 800 block of 24th Street on Wednesday, the Weld County Coroner’s Office said in a news release Tuesday. It’s not clear if Carrisales’ death was related to the storm and is still under investigation. The cause and manner of his death are pending an autopsy and lab report.

Original story: One person was killed and another seriously injured after a severe storm pummeled east Greeley with 2-inch hail and heavy rain Tuesday night and early Wednesday morning, flooding homes and businesses and damaging vehicles.

Emergency crews from Greeley, Evans, Windsor and Platte Valley responded to dozens of calls during the night, rescuing people trapped by floodwaters in structures and vehicles during the storm, city spokeswoman Becca Vaclavik wrote in an email.

Hail is piled up in the front yard of a home in a neighborhood southeast of downtown Greeley after a severe hailstorm moved over parts of Greeley, Colorado, on May 29, 2024. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
Hail is piled up in the front yard of a home in a neighborhood southeast of downtown Greeley after a severe hailstorm moved over parts of Greeley, Colorado, on May 29, 2024. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)

First responders answered 47 calls for people needing assistance because of the storm and 10 rescues, Vaclavik said.

Photos posted by the Greeley Fire Department on Facebook showed a firefighter into a basement apartment to rescue a trapped resident. City staff reported floodwaters as high as 18 inches on some roads and used snowplows to remove the hail, Vaclavik said.

Vaclavik declined to release additional information about the person who died but confirmed the death and injury were both storm-related.

The Weld County Coroner’s Office did not have any cases of “obvious flood-related deaths” as of Wednesday night, said Chief Deputy Coroner Jolene Weiner.

City officials could not confirm the extent of the flooding or damage Wednesday, but 16th Street between U.S. 85 and Sixth Avenue remained closed throughout the day.

Greeley resident Juan Contreras Jr. waded through a mix of hail and water up to his thighs to get to his father’s house on Sixth Street on Tuesday night.

Contreras, 45, initially thought his 68-year-old father was exaggerating when he called his son on Tuesday, sounding panicked about water coming into the house.

But as he approached the house, floodwaters rose to the doors of Contreras’ pick-up and there was so much hail the surface of the water was white.

Water in the house was up to Contreras’ knees by the time he made it inside and called 911 to ask for help rescuing his father, who is disabled.

“He’s in his boxers, ready to go to bed and now there are shoes floating around his house,” Contreras said. “It looked like something out of a movie.”

Juan Contreras Sr. carries items out of his home that flooded after a severe hailstorm moved over parts of Greeley, Colorado, on May 29, 2024. Contreras is trying to dry off some of his belongings in the sun in his front yard. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
Juan Contreras Sr. carries items out of his home that flooded after a severe hailstorm moved over parts of Greeley, Colorado, on May 29, 2024. Contreras is trying to dry off some of his belongings in the sun in his front yard. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)

Firefighters carried Juan Contreras Sr. out of the house and he’s now staying at his son’s apartment in west Greeley. His father’s insurance company said Wednesday that flood damage is not covered under his policy, and Contreras isn’t sure what to do next.

“I’ve never been in this kind of situation before,” he said. “I don’t know how people get out there and get help in the community.”

It sounded like someone was shooting a pellet gun at Greeley resident Jared Sughroue’s door when the hail started Tuesday night, and the ice initially blocked water from flooding into the house near 7th Avenue and 15th Street.

But that didn’t last long, and Sughroue’s basement flooded with 6 feet of water in the span of 30 minutes. He tried jumping into the hail-filled water to save some items, but the water was too cold.

“When I jumped in, my whole body went into shock and I couldn’t breathe,” Sughroue said.

The storm dumped nearly 4 inches of rain on northeast Greeley and 2 inches on the west side of the city, said Bernie Meier, meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Boulder.

City crews were still assessing damage on Wednesday and opened a temporary shelter at the Greeley Family FunPlex, located at 1501 65th Ave., where four people and two dogs were staying.

Both Contreras and Sughroue said storm drains are notoriously ineffective in east Greeley and often back up during storms, but nothing like what happened Wednesday.

City of Greeley employees work to clear street drains in a neighborhood southeast of downtown Greeley that flooded overnight when a severe hailstorm moved over Greeley, Colorado, on May 29, 2024. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
City of Greeley employees work to clear street drains in a neighborhood southeast of downtown Greeley that flooded overnight when a severe hailstorm moved over Greeley, Colorado, on May 29, 2024. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)

City officials are aware of major flooding issues in the east Greeley and are working to fix it through a seven-phase capital construction project, the first phase of which wraps up this summer, Vaclavik said.

The first phase of the project includes “infrastructure, public art, river restoration and an extension of the Poudre Trail,”

Contreras’ father’s house also saw minor flooding after torrential rains in 2013.

“It’s taken over 10 years to get that taken care of,” he said. “I guess I’m disappointed in them.”

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