BFF-41 Venice comes up for air after week of record flooding

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Venice comes up for air after week of record flooding

ROME, Nov 18, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Venice sought to return to normal life on
Monday after a week of unprecedented flooding that devastated the city,
submerging homes, business and cultural treasures.

The wave of bad weather that struck throughout Italy — from rivers of
water rushing through the streets of the southern town of Matera to tornados
in the Grosseto region of Tuscany – was still a concern in certain areas, and
was expected to continue.

In the north, the Trentino-Alto Adige region bordering Austria was at high
risk of avalanches, forecasters said, with continued strong rains expected to
batter the region around Genoa and the island of Sardinia.

Schools reopened in Venice as shopkeepers with mops and buckets in hand
tried to muck out the water and mud that had flooded their stores since
Tuesday.

The high of 110-115 cm (3.6-3.7 feet) expected midday in Venice was a
welcome improvement on the past week when the so-called “acqua alta,” or high
waters, exceeded a level of 150 cm three times.

Venetians are accustomed to flooding in their UNESCO city surrounded by a
lagoon, but last week’s wave of inundations was unprecedented in modern
times, with Tuesday’s high not seen since 1966.

St Mark’s square, in one of the lowest points of the city, begins to flood
when the tide rises 80 cm above sea level, according to Venice’s tides
authority.

“Forms will soon be available to citizens and businesses to claim
compensation. Thanks to all who worked so hard to get through the day,”
tweeted Mayor Luigi Brugnaro on Sunday, after the waters submerged yet again
an estimated 70 percent of the city.

Outside a gallery, painter Davide De Guglielmi, vowed to reopen after
cleaning up.

“We’re built like that, we’re stubborn. We know the price we have to pay
to live in this city,” De Guglielmi told AGI.

“We’ve lost almost everything,” he said. “All the Christmas orders had
just arrived: new frames, gift cards…,” he said.

Forecasters expect the waters not to exceed 110 cm in Venice in coming
days, allowing residents to assess the damage that the mayor has already put
at over a billion euros.

On Sunday, residents of Florence and Pisa braced for possible flooding of
the Arno river, but the two Tuscan cities managed to escape flooding or
damage and a state of alert was lifted.

In Italy’s northeast heavy snowfall on Sunday provoked an avalanche that
grazed a populated area of the Martell Valley in the Alto Adige, without
causing major damage.

About 30 highways in the area remained closed to traffic on Monday and
schools were shut.

BSS/AFP/BZC/1940HRS