Flooding a drain on business
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Elia Powers
Rows of sandbags remained stationed like watchdogs on Balboa
Peninsula sidewalks Monday, hours after skies had cleared for the
first time in days.
Some restaurants and shops stayed closed all morning and
afternoon, as owners hired cleaning crews to dry carpets and sweep
entryways. Paper signs placed in windows alerted customers and mail
deliverers to try back on Wednesday.
Slick spots on streets and pockets of puddles were all that
remained from the weekend storm, which left business owners with
worried nights and morning headaches.
About 1,200 sandbags were issued over a two-day period last
weekend, Newport Beach deputy general services director Mike Pisani
said. Store owners and city residents dropped by all weekend to pick
up materials from the facility, he said.
Richard Luehrs, president of the Newport Beach Chamber of
Commerce, said he spent much of Tuesday morning taking stock of the
damage by calling area businesses to hear their flooding stories.
He said he knows from experience that prolonged storms negatively
affect the local economy.
“Customers don’t want to come out in the rain, so business is
depressed automatically,” Luehrs said. “When the tide comes up and
the rain continues, you have flooding, and that adds to the problem.”
If Marie Schock was worried about sustained damage to her boating
retail and service store, her face didn’t show it.
She watched in amusement Monday as her son played a video he shot
of the flooding 24 hours earlier. It showed a layer of water, more
than 5 inches deep, covering the carpeted floor of the family-owned
Schock Boats.
Schock, vice president of the company, said her business lost the
use of its phones and suffered irreparable harm to some computer
systems.
As of late Sunday night, she hadn’t been concerned about the
facility, which sits on the edge of the Cannery Village district of
Newport Beach.
The city’s water pumps were doing their jobs, she said, and the
gate to the Newport Harbor was closed, blocking the rising waters
from pouring out onto the side streets.
But Monday morning, when Schock arrived to the building, she was
greeted with flooding.
The gate remained closed because of an exceptionally high tide,
and gallons of water from neighboring streets flowed toward her
waterfront building.
“The street filled up like a bathtub, and the water had nowhere to
go,” said Schock, who has worked at the facility for 33 years.
The gate finally opened Tuesday morning, and employees attempted
to get the facility back to working order.
Schock said she hadn’t seen flooding this bad in 15 years. Still, she kept her circumstance in perspective.
“Our problems are small compared to what we’ve seen on television
from this week,” she said. “We’re lucky. The city workers did the
best job they could.”
One Newport Beach couple didn’t wait for the city to act.
Dan and Patricia Hilton, who have lived in Newport Beach since
1949 and now reside above Hilton Builders, their Balboa Peninsula
construction company, made the most of their resources during Monday
morning’s flooding.
They grabbed excess sandbags at their construction project sites
and brought them back to their office to block the entryway. The
couple took the leftover bags to neighboring businesses on their
street.
“They were overjoyed when they saw us,” Patricia Hilton said. “We
got [the sandbags] to them faster than they could get them from the
city.”
The couple’s preparation paid off, as they suffered no damage to
their first-floor office. But by 10 a.m. Monday, their street was
under more than a foot of water.
Two cars were stranded on the street before the city closed it
down by mid-morning, Patricia Hilton said.
“Every time a car came by, it created a wake, and water came up to
our door,” she said.
Employees wore trash bags over their shoes and pants as they
crossed the street. Patricia Hilton said the flooding was the worst
she had ever seen, and the company lost at least four hours of work
time.
Around the corner, at Balboa Newport Realty, owner Karly Brown
fielded an endless string of business calls on her cellphone.
Her office was closed all day Monday and well into Tuesday because
of water that seeped into the building. New electrical systems, phone
lines and carpeting are needed before the office is back to its
original condition, Brown said.
“This is the first time I’ve ever seen anything like this,” she
said.
* ELIA POWERS is the enterprise and general assignment reporter.
He may be reached at (714) 966-4623 or by e-mail at
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