Officials in New Mexico announced on July 9 that at least 200 homes were damaged during a deadly flash flood in Ruidoso a day earlier, and local emergency managers warned that the number could more than double as surveys continue.
“Things have changed,” Ruidoso Mayor Lynn Crawford told reporters in an update on July 10. “There was a lot more damage than what we had assumed and what we thought in the beginning. ... We’ve had to take a step back to move forward.”
Danielle Silva of the New Mexico Department of Homeland Security and Emergency Management said emergency crews carried out at least 85 swift-water rescues in the Ruidoso area, including rescuing people trapped in their homes and cars.
One person is still missing.
Crawford added on July 10 that the flood damage was far greater than previously realized, citing damage to water lines and the distribution points for potable water.
Meanwhile, Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham took an aerial tour of Ruidoso and the surrounding area with other officials in the hopes of bolstering their case for more federal funding for the community. She said that she received partial approval for a federal emergency declaration, enough to free up personnel for incident management and search and rescue efforts.
She said the federal government would likely advance $15 million to jumpstart recovery efforts from the Department of Agriculture and the Federal Emergency Management Agency. That amount could climb to more than $100 million over the coming months as Ruidoso recently requested that amount in federal aid to convert flood-prone private lands to public property.
Ruidoso spent the last year rebuilding from wildfires and subsequent flooding.







