The Borneo Post

Missouri River flooding forces evacuation of 7,500 residents

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ST. JOSEPH, Missouri: Record floodwater­s that submerged vast stretches of Nebraska and Iowa farmland along America’s longest river reached a new crest on Friday at the waterfront city of St. Joseph, Missouri, forcing chaotic evacuation­s of thousands from low-lying areas.

With emergency sirens blaring as the Missouri River rose to the top of the three-story-high levee wall in St. Joseph, about 88km north of Kansas City, Missouri, sheriff’s deputies rushed doorto-door urging residents to flee to higher ground.

About 1,500 residents and 6,000 employees of neighborin­g businesses were ushered out of the southern end of town, a city official said. Most of the evacuated dwellings were trailer homes interspers­ed among factories, warehouses and stockyards along a stretch of the riverfront known as “the Bottoms.”

Many residents appeared stunned as they scurried out of their homes with armloads of hurriedly gathered belongings to throw into their vehicles before joining a steady stream of cars, pickup trucks, SUVs and tractortra­ilers.

The abrupt evacuation, coming as the river rose about 9 feet above flood stage, appeared to take authoritie­s and residents by surprise.

“We don’t have anywhere to go. This is overwhelmi­ng,” said Linda Roberts, 70, as she and her husband, John, 66, packed their SUV, their dog sitting uneasily in a pet carrier.

With police doing their best to direct gridlocked traffic and with helicopter­s whirring overhead, dust billowed up from packed roadways for hours, mixed with the odors of livestock and chemicals, as the mass exodus proceeded in slow motion.

The St. Jo Frontier Casino, about 5 miles to the north, was already surrounded by water, and roadways along the river were submerged, officials said.

The flood crest was expected to reach the Kansas towns of Atchison and Leavenwort­h, about 35 miles farther downstream, on Saturday, and Kansas City as early as Sunday, officials said.

Missouri River flooding was triggered by last week’s “bomb cyclone” storm, which killed at least four people, drowned livestock and closed dozens of roads across a large swath of Nebraska and Iowa. Property and financial losses for the two Midwestern states were projected to surpass US$3 billion.

Torrential showers over hundreds of square miles of melting snowpack produced record volumes of runoff that poured into the Missouri just above the Gavins Point Dam where the river divides Nebraska from South Dakota, nearly 400 miles upstream from Kansas City. The dam is operated by the US Army Corps of Engineers.

Water entering the reservoir from that storm marked the most ever measured there since recordkeep­ing began 120 years ago, said John Remus, chief water manager for the Army Corps’ Missouri River basin.

The downstream flow, which broke flood stage records at three locations along the river, has placed enormous strain on the system of flood-control levees and dikes in the region. Nearly 50 levee breaches have been confirmed in the Army Corp’s Omaha district alone, encompassi­ng the hardest hit parts of Nebraska, Iowa and Missouri, officials told a news briefing. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Floodwater surrounds a farm, near Craig, Missouri. Midwest states are battling some of the worst floodings they have experience­d in decades as rain and snowmelt from the recent ‘bomb cyclone’ has inundated rivers and streams. — AFP photo
Floodwater surrounds a farm, near Craig, Missouri. Midwest states are battling some of the worst floodings they have experience­d in decades as rain and snowmelt from the recent ‘bomb cyclone’ has inundated rivers and streams. — AFP photo

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