Elephant Butte Irrigation District helps with La Union flood cleanup

From Staff Reports
Las Cruces Sun-News
A flooded orchard and field is pictured near La Union, N.M., where heavy rainfall caused substantial flooding beginning Thursday, Aug. 12, 2021.

LAS CRUCES - While recent rains provided relief to the ongoing drought, it came much too fast in some areas of the valley. La Union, in particular, saw flooding damage that residents and maintenance crews are still repairing. Elephant Butte Irrigation District Manager Gary Esslinger said the district was busy over the weekend answering calls about dangerous wash-ins into drains that were causing problems for those trying to use the district’s right of ways to access their homes and fields.

Stormwater is captured in canals near La Union, N.M., following heavy rains which caused extensive flooding in the rural community beginning Thursday, Aug. 12, 2021.

District employees were busy hauling dirt and shuttling equipment to repair flood-damaged infrastructure.

“We also sent out our battery of pumps to help farmers who were inundated with floodwater,” Esslinger said. “We are using our canal and drain system to drain flooded fields. We are working on trying to drain the fields below La Union in order to help get the water off the crops, as well as remove from around streets, homes, barns and corrals. It’s going to be a very busy week just trying to address the wash-ins and keep our pumps running.”

Photos:Flooding in La Union devastates community

On Dosi Alvarez’s farm in La Union, orchards and cotton fields were standing in floodwater. According to farmprogress.com, “When the supply of oxygen is cut off to the [cotton] plant and the field is in standing water, the plant can die in as little as 36 hours.”

Two of Alvarez’s longtime farm crew, Lorenzo Esquivel and Ramon Chavarria, raced the clock as they monitored the pumps EBID had loaned to help drain the fields.

Ramon Chavarria and Lorenzo Esquivel drain floodwater off a cotton field into an irrigation canal near La Union, N.M. The small, rural community was ravaged by flooding following heavy rains which began Thursday, Aug. 12, 2021.

“Hopefully we will get a break in the weather," said Esslinger. "We are fortunate that this was not a valley-wide storm event. So we were able to concentrate our manpower down south.”

He reported positive news, as well.

“Our flood control system worked well and we were able to capture floodwater and recharge the aquifer and put a lot of the stormwater in our system,” Esslinger said.

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