His business is about a block from the swelling Ohio River. He said
the flood is coming, so he's going to have to have to pack up and
get out before the waters rise. But he doesn't know where he's
going. "Maybe Carbondale," Jones said Tuesday evening as he packed
up his business.
Jones is one of the nearly 3,000 people in Illinois' southernmost
city who have been asked to evacuate their homes and businesses and
move to higher ground.
"Right now it's just a voluntary evacuation," Jones said. "I am
getting some stuff out of here now. I don't have anyplace I can take
anything."
But Jones doesn't want to just leave it for the flood. And the
water is coming -- he knows that for sure.
"More storm and rain is headed this way," he said. "I can't see
it getting any better."
Jones figures it may take him a day or so to pack up. In that
time Illinois is expected to send help to Cairo.
Gov. Pat Quinn issued a disaster proclamation on Monday after
heavy thunderstorms pounded the state in the past two weeks. On
Tuesday, the governor ordered the National Guard to southern
Illinois.
Quinn is sending 20 National Guardsmen to assist southern
Illinois towns along the rising Ohio and Mississippi rivers. If
conditions get worse, the governor may deploy up to 105 more
guardsmen.
But it's not just people. The state has sent what it calculates
will be enough material to prevent widespread damage.
Illinois already directed 210,000 sandbags and 89 rolls of
plastic to the river region to help create a flood barrier. Illinois
Department of Corrections inmate crews also were sent.
"We've made longtime preparations for this," Quinn said. "We've
had sandbags sent in for many months now, and we want to really be
ready in case of an emergency."
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City officials in Brookport also asked residents to voluntarily
evacuate, said Patti Thompson, spokeswoman for Illinois Emergency
Management Agency.
"We have a lot of areas right now that we are watching closely,"
Thompson said. "And (authorities are) working with the local
officials to help them with any needs that they might have to
protect their citizens and their critical infrastructure."
It is going to be at least a few days before Illinois sees the
worst of the flooding from the Ohio River. The National Weather
Service in Paducah, Ky., predicted the river will crest at 60.5 feet
Saturday. That would be almost a foot higher than 1937's record
flood on the Ohio.
Even with the new resources to fight the flood, Jones said the
state can only do so much.
"Something like this is unpredictable," Jones said. "Man only can
do so much. So it is up to God on what really happens."
[Illinois
Statehouse News; By DIANE S.W. LEE]
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