'It's
going to get ugly': Midwest calls in national guard as flood disaster unfolds
Sixteen states issue flood warnings as waters blamed for 22 deaths in Illinois, while Missouri governor expects record-breaking disaster
Sixteen states issue flood warnings as waters blamed for 22 deaths in Illinois, while Missouri governor expects record-breaking disaster
2
January, 2015
Floods
have submerged towns, roads, casinos and shopping malls around the
south and midwest for more than three days, prompting governors in
Illinois and Iowa to call in the national guard.
Sixteen
states issued flood warnings covering some eight million people. By
Saturday floodwaters had begun to subside in many areas, reopening
several important highways, after topping levees in the region late
on Friday.
But
swollen rivers have yet to crest in southern states, alarming
governors in Tennessee, Louisiana and Mississippi. At Dardanelle,
Arkansas, the National Weather Service recorded the Arkansas river at
41ft, nine feet above flood stage.
Missouri
governor Jay Nixon said the overflow off the Mississippi would
overtake the records set by “the great flood of 1993”, which
killed 50 people, broke hundreds of levees and caused thousands to
flee their homes.
Nixon
visited Eureka and Cape Girardeau in eastern Missouri, where
floodwaters caused widespread damage, and announced the federal
government had approved his request to declare an emergency to help
with the massive cleanup and recovery operation.
The
governor described the scale of the flood damage as other worldly.
“It’s almost as if you’re living on some other planet,” he
said, standing near a growing pile of debris in a park in Eureka,
about an hour’s drive west of St Louis on the banks of the Meramec
river, which flows into the Mississippi.
“This
is just a tiny fraction of the trail of destruction,” the governor
told reporters.
In
Illinois, governor Bruce Rauner ordered troops into action in the
south of the state and declared 12 counties disaster zones. He began
touring the waterlogged towns on Friday. Several thousand were
evacuated from rural towns such as Pontoon Beach and Alton; 11 levees
around the region have failed since flooding began last week. State
authorities have blamed the flooding for 22 deaths and four missing
people.
In
south-western Illinois, the 500 or so people living behind the Len
Small levee, which protects the hamlets of Olive Branch, Hodges Park,
and Unity along with rural homes, were urged to move to higher ground
after the Mississippi began pouring over the barrier.
Alexander
County board chairman Chalen Tatum said sandbagging efforts were cut
off because of the danger to volunteers. More water is expected to
come before the river crests on Sunday.
The
national guard troops were expected to bring water pumps, sandbags,
potable water and other supplies to communities overwhelmed by the
flooding.
On
Friday, search teams in central Illinois found the body of one of two
missing teenagers reported missing on Monday, after their pickup
truck was pulled into the floodwaters.
Divers
concentrated their search in areas where a cellphone was traced. On
Friday morning, one of the teens, Devan R Everett, was found in the
water near the truck, county coroner Amy Calvert Winans announced.
Iowa
governor Terry Branstad ordered national guard soldiers to assist
recovery efforts in neighboring Missouri, where they will provide a
water purification system. At St Charles, the Missouri river crested
more than 10ft above flood stage.
Waters
swamped an estimated 150 homes in Arnold, Missouri, near the meeting
point of the Mississippi and the Meramec. The river crested there on
Thursday at more than 47ft, two feet above the previous record and
nine feet above what would be considered a serious flood.
With
wastewater plants closed or damaged by the floods – and in one
case, sewage pouring into the Mississippi – beer giant
Anheuser-Busch has donated nearly 33,000 water cans in Oklahoma and
around St Louis.
Hundreds
of people were evacuated, including Damon Thorne, 44, and his
60-year-old mother, Linda, who live together in an Arnold mobile home
park that washed away. For now, the Thornes are staying in a Red
Cross shelter at a Baptist church.
“We’re
just basically homeless,” Damon Thorne said. “We have nowhere to
go.”
Philip
and Jenn Bennett’s home after flood waters receded in their home in
Fenton, Missouri on Saturday. Photograph: Kate Munsch/AFP/Getty
Images
In
south-eastern Missouri, the rising Mississippi damaged about 20 homes
in Cape Girardeau and threatened a power substation, though a flood
wall protected many of the community’s 40,000 residents. The crest
prediction at Cape Girardeau expected on Sunday was upgraded to a
foot and a half above the 1993 record.
In
nearby Allenville, a town accustomed to floods, roads were cut off by
high water. Most of the four dozen residents stayed anyway, using
boats to get around.
“They
are used to being isolated and cut off, but with this record height,
we’re confident some homes will get wet,” Cape Girardeau County
emergency management director Richard Knaup said. “We’re just not
sure how many.”
Meteorologists
expect water levels to increase in Memphis, Tennessee, and Baton
Rouge, Louisiana, into mid-January, possibly setting records as the
rivers wend toward the Gulf of Mexico. Louisiana governor Bobby
Jindal declared a state of emergency on Thursday, and Mississippi
governor Phil Bryant requested a federal disaster declaration from
President Obama.
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