BRADENTON, FLORIDA - Emergency officials urged residents to evacuate more than 600 homes downstream from Lake Manatee on Sunday as excess water from the reservoir, swollen by days of torrential rain, gushed through a dam's flood gates.<br>
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Some homes were already flooded Sunday morning as officials released water into the Manatee River to keep the lake - which rose 5 feet higher than normal - from pouring uncontrolled over its emergency spillways.<br>
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The lake had continued rising as crews initially were able to open only two of the dam's three flood gates.<br>
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Divers and crews working with a crane and cables finally forced the third gate open, and by afternoon the lake's level was steadily going down, said Mike Stone, a spokesman for the state emergency management division.<br>
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"It's nowhere near like what it was," said Larry Leinhauser, spokesman for Manatee County public safety emergency operations.<br>
The dam's operations were back to normal late Sunday, said Jay Moyles, a Manatee County spokesman.<br>
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The water did not reach the emergency spillways, which have never been used, Leinhauser said. Engineers were not worried about the stability of the concrete dam itself, he said.<br>
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A total of 235 people went to two public schools in Bradenton and Palmetto that opened as shelters for residents of the area, about 40 miles southeast of Tampa, Stone said.<br>
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"We're a little bit concerned because we're afraid everyone is avoiding the inevitable," said Peter McMahon, a spokesman for the American Red Cross.<br>
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Older, low-lying homes along the Manatee River downstream from the dam were most vulnerable to flooding because newer homes have been built on higher pads.<br>
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An additional 4 to 6 inches of rain fell Sunday along a 100-mile stretch of the Gulf Coast from Sarasota to Bayport, causing isolated coastal flooding, said Eric Oglesby, a National Weather Service hydrologist in Ruskin.<br>
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"We've been getting hit every day for about a week now," he said. Fewer showers are expected Monday, and "we should dry out on Tuesday."<br>
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More than 10 inches already had fallen in the region since Wednesday, and scattered sections of Manatee and Citrus counties reported up to 20 inches last week. A flood watch was in effect in 18 Florida counties until Monday evening.