Midwest flood woes head south

by amyjudd | June 18, 2008 at 08:38 am
1686 views | 7 Recommendations | 12 comments

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UPDATE: 6:22PM EST

Floodwaters breached another levee in Illinois Wednesday as residents in other parts of the U.S. Midwest scrambled to shore up embankments along the Mississippi River.

The breach happened in the western Illinois town of Meyer, forcing the some 50 residents to leave their homes, Adams County Emergency Management Agency spokeswoman Julie Shepard said.

Along the Mississippi River in Illinois and Missouri, officials were monitoring other levees to see if they will hold against the rising waters.

The flooding began in eastern Iowa, causing more than $1.5 billion in damage and forcing thousands from their homes as it moved south.

Floodwaters are receding in much of Iowa, but the destruction has moved downstream as emergency crews and residents have raced to add more protection to the levees that protect the dozens of Mississippi towns that could be affected.

See previous NowPublic coverage here and here.

National Guardsmen joined hundreds of volunteers in filling sandbags and reinforcing earthen barriers in southeastern Iowa, eastern Missouri and western Illinois. The mood grew frantic when several major tributaries to the Mississippi spilled their banks and the river surpassed record flood levels, swamping towns along the way.

Early Tuesday morning, more than a dozen sandbagging volunteers and a motorist had to be rescued when a levee was breached in Carthage Lake, Ill., about 70 miles southwest of Davenport, Iowa.

The advancing water swamped farmland and the community of Gulfport, Ill., leading officials to shut down the Great River Bridge, which connects that part of the state to Missouri.

In Burlington, Iowa, postal workers and schoolteachers waded through waist-deep, muck-laden waters, dragging plastic sheets and lugging sandbags in their effort to hold back the flow.

In La Grange, Mo., residents watched helplessly as the Mississippi filled the streets for the third time in 15 years. The post office was flooded, and City Hall was in danger. So were scores of homes in the town of about 1,000, whose residents were forced to rebuild after floods in 1993 and 2001.

"A third time? I can't do it," a weepy Harold Ludwig, 68, the town's former mayor, told the Associated Press. "I'm sorry."

Part of the problem, said U.S. Army Corps of Engineers spokesman Ron Fournier, was that it was nearly impossible to predict which barriers -- such as the sandbag and earth-based ones being furiously built along the Mississippi -- might crumble beneath the mounting water pressure. Officials don't know where to focus valuable time and energy.

"That's a crystal ball that nobody has," Fournier told reporters.

President Bush plans to visit Iowa on Thursday to tour the disaster region. At a news conference, he said funds would be set aside to help flood victims. "I unfortunately have been to too many disasters as president," Bush said.

Though state and federal experts were still assessing the damage to large swaths of the Midwest on Tuesday, they said the impact would be substantial.
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mapcin

Missippi River flooding in St. Louis on June 14. This was taken next to the St. Louis Arch.

mapcin has contributed a photo to this story.

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white_shadow_photog

Great story Amy! Its getting really crazy around here as more levees are about to break. Its definitely a waiting game to see what happens around here!

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XRAYER

Prior to the 21 1/2 foot crest on tuesday 6/17/08.

XRAYER has contributed a photo to this story.

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Tiffanie Weaver Photography

 www.gossip.tiffanieweaver.com

Tiffanie Weaver Photography has contributed a photo to this story.

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bleedham

Lock and dam #15 between Davenport Iowa and Rock Island Illinois has witnessed flooding comparable to the big flood of 1993, as have entire communities along the upper Mississippi river and it's tributaries.

bleedham has contributed a photo to this story.

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murdockx3

On Friday, June 6, 2008, torrential rains pounded sections of southeastern Illinois, resulting in over 7" of rainfall in just a few short hours. As a result, the Embarrass River (pronounced 'Ambraw'), rushed out of its banks, flooding farmlands and threatening to destroy homes.

Homes in central Jasper County, however, were spared complete destruction when the Ste. Marie levee broke downriver, releasing the powerful flood waters to spread over acres of crops and numerous roads. A portion of Rt. 33 between Newton and Effingham was closed on Saturday as was a section of Rt. 130 between Newton and Greenup.

Many people were forced from their homes in the southeast section of the county where the river had formed its own wide course. The waters rose so quickly that it took many people unaware. One young man spent five hours in a tree, clinging to a branch until help finally arrived.

The photo was taken on Sunday, June 8, and shows County Rd. 9 impassable between Ste. Marie and Willow Hill, following the break in the levee.

murdockx3 has contributed a photo to this story.

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bleedham

 

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pioneer98

Figge Art Museum during the 2008 floods in Davenport, IA. The black part is a parking garage. The lobby is up at the glass level. The museum stayed open and kept its normal hours during the food.

pioneer98 has contributed a photo to this story.

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DustinCOliver

This was the fifth-highest recorded flood in the Quad Cities (Davenport & Bettendorf, IA and Moline & Rock Island, IL). The river is receding now, but there is a chance for more rain this weekend.

DustinCOliver has contributed a photo to this story.

Felton Barch
Felton Barch
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 15:26 on June 21st, 2008

amyjudd, thanks for sharing the story.

Although not a particularly religious person, the notion of crying out to the higher powers is appealing to me lately!

Hoping things work out the best possible for all those affected.


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heatherdw

The river isn't done rising here. Probably won't be done until Tuesday night

heatherdw has contributed a photo to this story.

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dangoranson

Mississippi river in downtown Davenport, Iowa

dangoranson has contributed a photo to this story.

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Felton Barch
First Flagged at 3:26 PM, Jun 21, 2008 by Felton Barch
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