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‘Historic’ flooding prompts WA governor to declare emergency

Flooding in Skagit County on Dec. 9, 2025. The Skagit River is expected to reach record flood levels.
Courtesy of Skagit County
Flooding in Skagit County on Dec. 9, 2025. The Skagit River is expected to reach record flood levels.

As floodwaters swelled around Washington, threatening low-lying communities along rivers, Gov. Bob Ferguson signed a statewide emergency declaration on Wednesday.

Ferguson said he’d also seek an expedited emergency declaration from the federal government in response to the flooding, which is the result of an atmospheric river that has dumped multiple inches of rain in parts of the state since Monday.

A National Weather Service forecast for Wednesday morning through Thursday afternoon showed 6 to 8 inches of rain in communities on the western edge of the Cascades, like Concrete, Gold Bar and Darrington. Even more rain was forecast at higher elevations.

“Lives will be at stake in the coming days,” Ferguson said in a press conference at Camp Murray near Tacoma, urging people to follow evacuation orders.

Ferguson also activated the Washington National Guard through Dec. 31. Adjutant General Gent Welsh said there’d be 100 National Guard members deployed immediately and more than 300 by the end of the day tomorrow, including aviators and rescue specialists.

National Guard members will be positioned tonight near Skagit County, according to Karina Shagren, a spokesperson for the Washington Military Department.

Robert Ezelle, director of the Military Department’s Emergency Management Division, emphasized the deluge was “far from done” and warned that next week could bring more wet weather.

Rivers from around the Canadian border down to southwest Washington are at moderate to major flood stage, with water levels expected to remain high through the end of the week.

Officials expect a number of rivers to reach or exceed record flood levels. In total, 26 across Washington were at risk of some level of flooding, according to the state.

A chief concern is the Skagit River, where Ezelle said current flood levels are expected to surpass a 1990 record by about 4 feet upriver.

County officials are preparing to evacuate about 75,000 people from low-lying areas in that region, according to Ezelle.

He said levees on the Skagit and other rivers could be overtopped, as well as a floodwall in Arlington. The weather service warned of “catastrophic flooding impacts” along the Skagit and Snohomish rivers through Thursday.

These rising floodwaters on Wednesday prompted varying levels of evacuation orders in Orting in Pierce County, parts of Skagit County and Ebey Island between Everett and Lake Stevens. And washouts have closed many roads.

The emergency declaration will give the state the chance to seek federal funds in response to the flooding. Ferguson described the federal declaration as critical and said it would help to unlock potentially life-saving resources for the state.

The State Emergency Operations Center at Camp Murray has been activated to its highest level to help coordinate state assistance for the flooding. Four swift water rescue teams are being mobilized to aid in response efforts.

A slew of major routes and local roads are experiencing closures.

A 50-mile stretch of Highway 2 is closed between Index and Coles Corner, west of Leavenworth, due to heavy rain causing slides and flooding of the highway. As of 2 p.m., state transportation officials had no estimate on when the major east-west route would reopen. Many other smaller roads had also washed out across western Washington.

“This is historic flooding,” Ferguson said.

Washington Sen. Maria Cantwell called it “potential once-in-a-lifetime flooding.” She said she, too, was working to get federal assistance to respond to it.

“NOAA forecasters are anticipating potentially record-breaking flooding along the Skagit, Snohomish, and Columbia rivers tonight and tomorrow,” Cantwell said in a statement after a briefing with National Weather Service officials.

She urged people in those areas to pay attention to emergency alerts, follow instructions from the local authorities, and be prepared to move.

Washington has previously struggled to access federal disaster funding under the Trump administration. The Federal Emergency Management Agency, multiple times, refused the state’s request for aid following last year’s bomb cyclone, which caused significant storm damage.

“We need the federal government to do what’s entirely appropriate here, which is to declare an emergency that taps into the resources and the assistance from the federal government that literally can help us save lives, and help individuals save their homes and their property and their livestock,” Ferguson said.

Trump has floated axing the agency entirely, leaving states to fend for themselves after natural disasters, and has favored Republican-led states for federal help.

FEMA on Wednesday afternoon said it had deployed response teams to Washington, with more on standby. The agency’s Regional Response Coordination Center in Bothell was also activated.

Ferguson said he would speak with regional FEMA officials on Wednesday afternoon. His office said he’d be visiting areas hit hard by the flooding in the coming days.

Washington State Standard is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Washington State Standard maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Bill Lucia for questions: info@washingtonstatestandard.com.