Antelope Valley Press

Flooding, record rain in St. Louis

- By JIM SALTER

O’FALLON, Mo. — Record rainfall caused widespread flash flooding across the St. Louis area, early Tuesday, killing one person, displacing many others and prompting rescues from vehicles and homes.

One person died when a car in St. Louis was found covered in more than 8 feet of water. Several puppies drowned when a building became flooded at Stray Paws Adoptables, a stray dog rescue operation in St. Peters, a St. Louis suburb. Firefighte­rs in boats rescued other dogs from the building.

Damage across the region was widespread after a massive downpour dropped more than 12 inches of rain in parts of St. Charles County and up to 10 inches (25 centimeter­s) elsewhere in the St. Louis metropolit­an area. Most of the rain fell in a few hours shortly after midnight.

By noon, about nine inches of rain had fallen at Lambert Airport, demolishin­g the previous daily record of 6.85 inches set Aug. 20, 1915, when remnants of the Galveston, Texas, hurricane moved north to St. Louis. Forecaster­s expected more storms through the rest of the week.

Firefighte­rs were busy with water rescues. Sections of interstate­s 70, 64, 55 and 44 were all closed at various times as water swamped the roadways. Some motorists took to social media to report being stranded for hours.

In the city of St. Louis, the fire department rescued people from several homes after floodwater­s made it into houses. Fire Chief Dennis Jenkerson said at a news conference that many homes suffered significan­t damage, and some roofs were collapsing under the weight of the water.

Across the region, firefighte­rs and other first responders rescued more than 100 people, mostly from vehicles that tried to pass through water-covered roadways.

“We’ve had a tremendous amount of cars that have been door-deep and also roof-deep in some of these low-lying areas,” Jenkerson said.

The water was above the roof of a car found just after 10 a.m., in a neighborho­od near Forest Park. One person was pulled out but pronounced dead. Their identity has not been released.

In the St. Louis County town of Brentwood, residents were forced to evacuate when Deer Creek overflowed. Rising waters also threatened homes in Ladue, one of the wealthiest cities in Missouri.

Flooding was so bad that the iconic Gateway Arch closed for the day.

National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Marshall Pfahler said a storm stalled over the St. Louis area around midnight and kept pouring water over the same relatively narrow band.

“You have this swath of up to 10-inch amounts, and a county or two south they had a trace or even less,” Pfahler said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kimberly Tat and Matthew Robinson, holding onto his dog Bebe are rescued from their home, on Tuesday, by first responders from Central County Fire and Rescue along Main Street in Old Towne St. Peters after flooding from Dardenne Creek inundated the neighborho­od during heavy rain.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Kimberly Tat and Matthew Robinson, holding onto his dog Bebe are rescued from their home, on Tuesday, by first responders from Central County Fire and Rescue along Main Street in Old Towne St. Peters after flooding from Dardenne Creek inundated the neighborho­od during heavy rain.

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