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A riverside subdivision near the northwest Iowa city of Sloan called for help filling sandbags, while residents of the northeast Nebraska cabin community of Lazy River Acres left their homes Sunday before floodwater could block their escape. Knox County emergency manager Laura Hintz told the Norfolk Daily News that Nebraska Highway 12, which connects Lazy River Acres with Niobrara and Verdel, could be flooded over soon. In Montana, flooding near Hardin on Sunday morning brought down telephone equipment that handles 911 and long-distance calls for Glendive, Miles City, Sidney, Fairview, Colstrip, Forsyth, Wibaux and Terry. Emergency calls were rerouted until full service was restored before midday Monday, Qwest spokeswoman Michelle Jackson said. In the central Montana town of Roundup, houses and businesses remained under several feet of water from the Musselshell River, which first topped its banks and swept through town Thursday. A mandatory boil-water order was issued, said Major Lori Hampa-Chamberlin with the Montana National Guard. Crews were working to pull stranded vehicles out of flooded areas and most routes into or out of the town were cut off. "They're in trouble here," Hampa-Chamberlin said. "It's been raining nonstop." The Musselshell River level had fallen about 6 inches by Monday. However, that drop was expected to slow with Monday's rain, said Brian Tesar with the National Weather Service in Billings. Tesar said the expected warm-up later in the week raised the chances of flooding along the Yellowstone, Tongue, and Shields rivers in central and eastern Montana.
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