Flooding will go on in storm-ravaged U.S.
Midwest
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[March 20, 2019]
(Reuters) - The flooding that
devastated the U.S. Midwest is likely to last into next week, as rain
and melted snow flow into Kansas, Missouri and Mississippi, the National
Weather Service said.
Floods driven by melting snow in the Dakotas will persist even as
Nebraska and Iowa dig out from storms that have killed four people, left
one missing and caused more than a billion dollars in damage to crops,
livestock and roads.
"It's already not looking good downstream for the middle and lower
Mississippi and Missouri (rivers) into Kansas, Mississippi and
Missouri," Bob Oravec, a meteorologist with the NWS's Weather Prediction
Center, said early Wednesday.
The floodwaters have inundated a swath of Iowa and Nebraska along the
Missouri River, North America's longest river. Half of Iowa's 99
counties have declared states of emergency.
"That snow pack is still there and it's going to keep melting, and
that's bad news," Oravec said.
About an inch of rain is predicted for Saturday in the region, Oravec
said. "It's not a lot, but any precipitation is bad right now."
Vice President Mike Pence toured some of Nebraska Tuesday and promised
to help expedite federal help to the region.
Nebraska, Iowa and Wisconsin and Mississippi all declared states of
emergency after the floods, which stemmed from a powerful winter
hurricane last week. The flooding killed livestock, destroyed grains and
soybeans in storage and cut off access to farms because of road and rail
damage.
Authorities said they had rescued nearly 300 people in Nebraska alone,
with some rivers continuing to rise. Rescuers could be seen in boats
pulling pets from flooded homes. Some roadways crumbled to rubble and
sections of others were submerged. In Hamburg, Iowa, floodwaters covered
buildings.
$1 BILLION IN DAMAGE
Nebraska officials estimated flood damage for the state's agriculture at
more than $1 billion so far, according to Craig Head, vice president of
issue management at the Nebraska Farm Bureau. Head said that was likely
to grow as floodwaters recede.
"It's really too early to know for sure how bad this is going to get.
But one thing we do know: It's catastrophic for farmers," said Matt
Perdue, government relations director for the National Farmers Union.
"We’re hoping it's only $1 billion, but that's only a hope."
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Homes sit in flood waters after leaving casualities and causing
hundreds of millions of dollars in damages, with waters yet to crest
in parts of the U.S. midwest, in Peru, Nebraska, U.S., March 19,
2019. REUTERS/Karen Dillon
Nebraska officials estimate the floods have also caused $553 million
in damage to public infrastructure and other assets, and $89 million
to privately owned assets, according to the state's Emergency
Management Agency on Tuesday.
The water covered about a third of Offutt Air Force Base near Omaha,
Nebraska, home to the U.S. Strategic Command, whose responsibilities
include defending against and responding to nuclear attacks.
The Army Corps of Engineers is distributing 400,000 sandbags to
operators of 12 levees along the Missouri River in Missouri and
Kansas that are threatened by flooding, the Army Corps said in a
news release on Tuesday.
Roads leading to the Nebraska Public Power District's Cooper nuclear
plant near Brownville were engulfed by floodwaters from the
Missouri, but the facility was still operating safely at full power
on Tuesday.
The plant operator was flying staff members and supplies to the
plant by helicopter, power district spokesman Mark Becker said.
(Reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta; additional reporting by Karen
Dillon in Brownville, Neb., Gina Cherelus in New York, Jarrett
Renshaw in Philadelphia, P.J. Huffstutter and Mark Weinraub in
Chicago and Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles; editing by Larry King)
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