Rain pummels Cedar City, flooding homes, hospital, jail


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CEDAR CITY — Cleanup is underway from flooding in Cedar City and Enoch that left a mess in homes, on city streets and even in the hospital and jail.

The rain came in quickly Thursday afternoon, flooding parking lots and roads, quickly seeping inside homes and buildings.

It led to a quick scramble from crews, firefighters, police officers and residents to help clean it up.

"It started raining and it was raining really hard," said Cedar City resident Carrie Brown, who watched the water rise outside her office building.

This baseball field was one of many areas that flooded in Cedar City Thursday.
This baseball field was one of many areas that flooded in Cedar City Thursday. (Photo: Carrie Brown)

"It just really let loose and there was lightning, the power went out," Brown explained. "And water just kept flowing over past the drainage, because the drainage couldn't handle it at all."

At one point, a nearby baseball field flooded and Brown took pictures.

Other residents watched the muddy water swell in the streets and around their homes, taking pictures and videos of the mess.

At the Iron County Sheriff's Office and jail, water began pouring in through the door and windows.

"The sewer was starting to back up down in our basement," Sheriff Ken Carpenter said. "In the courtyard outside of the basement had filled with water."

He and jail staff explained that the ceiling collapsed in a medical area and hallways, and water seeped into jail cells.

Pictures and video show water dripping out of open areas where ceiling panels fell out, and murky sewage filling up the basement.

People work to sandbag the Iron County Sheriff’s Office and jail in Cedar City after heavy rain Thursday. Heavy rain flooded streets, homes, a hospital and the jail.
People work to sandbag the Iron County Sheriff’s Office and jail in Cedar City after heavy rain Thursday. Heavy rain flooded streets, homes, a hospital and the jail. (Photo: Iron County Sheriff)

"That particular part ended up flooding our crime lab, and some of our long-term evidence areas. It flooded our IT area and weight room," Carpenter said.

He said thankfully an evidence technician moved everything important out of the water's way, to avoid evidence being destroyed.

An old, failing building, he said, is part of why the water so easily overtook the drainage system and leaked through the roof.

Carpenter said it's possible they may have to relocate inmates as they brace for more storms this weekend.

Flooding outside and inside Cedar City Hospital on Thursday led to rescheduling surgeries. Heavy rain flooded streets, homes, the hospital and jail.
Flooding outside and inside Cedar City Hospital on Thursday led to rescheduling surgeries. Heavy rain flooded streets, homes, the hospital and jail. (Photo: Iron County Sheriff)

The fire department helped pump out the jail and Cedar City Hospital. At the hospital, the south side was hit hardest and water made its way into the area of the operating room.

Intermountain Health released a statement:

"Cedar City Hospital sustained some flooding that affected the south side of the hospital, including areas around the operating room. The hospital is still operational, and patients are completely safe and receiving any needed care. However, surgeries planned for tomorrow (Friday) are being rescheduled and patients affected by this have been contacted."

Law enforcement officers stand in the flood waters in a Cedar City neighborhood on Thursday. Heavy rain flooded streets, homes, a hospital and jail.
Law enforcement officers stand in the flood waters in a Cedar City neighborhood on Thursday. Heavy rain flooded streets, homes, a hospital and jail. (Photo: Sierra Nelson)

After all pouring in at once, the rain stopped, and the waters subsided.

"Things were able to drain," Brown said. She was standing in front of the baseball field and showed the view behind her of green grass. "So the baseball field is now mostly drained."

Now comes drying out before more storms hit this weekend.

"I know a lot of people are out helping their neighbors," Brown said. "Cleaning up pump water from basements that need to be done."

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Lauren Steinbrecher
Lauren Steinbrecher is an Emmy award-winning reporter and multimedia journalist who joined KSL in December 2021.

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