El Dorado News-Times

16 dead following severe weather in Midwest, South

6 confirmed dead in Arkansas

- By Jim Salter

ST. LOUIS — Several southern states braced for more severe weather Monday in the wake of storms, tornadoes and flooding that claimed 16 lives and left authoritie­s in Arkansas searching for two children swept away by raging waters.

The outbreak that began Saturday over much of the U.S. Midwest and South included at least four tornadoes in Texas and severe flooding after more than a foot of rain fell in parts of Missouri. The storm even spawned a rare mid-spring snowstorm in Kansas.

In Arkansas, six confirmed deaths didn’t include the two missing children who were inside a truck with their mother on Saturday when the vehicle was swept off a bridge near Hindsville, about 130 miles northwest of Little Rock. Authoritie­s were still searching but conceded it was now likely a recovery, not a rescue, operation.

The body of a kayaker was recovered Monday, a day after he’d gone missing near Little Rock. A fire chief in Arkansas died when he was struck by a vehicle while working the storm.

The mayor of the small town of Pocahontas, Arkansas, ordered an evacuation Monday as the Black River rose toward an expected record crest of 29.5 feet on Friday — a foot above the record set in 2011.

It’s not over yet. More flooding and tornadoes are possible as storms roll eastward in a band stretching from Alabama into the Ohio River valley. A wind advisory was in effect over much of the South. Parts of the Florida Panhandle could be affected by severe thundersto­rms or high winds and dangerous rip currents.

In Missouri, docile creeks swelled to dangerous levels, and river levels jumped after the downpours. The Missouri State Emergency Management

Agency counted 143 water rescues statewide but acknowledg­ed that countless others probably weren’t reported. Hundreds of people were evacuated, a levee was topped in a rural area northwest of St. Louis, and a 57-mile stretch of Interstate 44 was closed.

The Mississipp­i River was well above flood stage at several points, including Cape Girardeau, Missouri, where it is expected to crest later this week within a halffoot of the all-time record of 48.9 feet.

Near Cape Girardeau, residents of tiny Allenville were urged to evacuate, but many did not, even as the town was surrounded by water. The only way in or out was by boat.

“The old-timers, they know how the river reacts,” Cape Girardeau County emergency management director Richard Knaup said. “They’re old swampers, let me tell you. They’re good country folks. They’d sooner take care of themselves than depend on the government.”

Hundreds of people spent Monday sandbaggin­g Missouri towns along the Meramec River, just 16 months after

record flooding along the suburban St. Louis waterway. Eureka police Sgt. David Sindel said 30 to 50 homes in his town are endangered, along with about a dozen businesses as the river is expected to reach within half-a-foot of the 2015 record.

“Unfortunat­ely, it’s Mother Nature and I

guess there’s not much we can do about it,” Sindel said.

Flash floods in Missouri were blamed in the deaths of a 77-yearold man, an 18-year-old man and a 72-year-old woman, whose husband desperatel­y tried to save her before their car was swept away.

 ?? Rogelio V. Solis/Associated Press ?? After the Storm: Mattie Coleman, laughs outside what remains of her combinatio­n flower shop, thrift store and laundromat facility Monday in Durant, Miss., as she cleans up from a possible tornado hit on Sunday morning.
Rogelio V. Solis/Associated Press After the Storm: Mattie Coleman, laughs outside what remains of her combinatio­n flower shop, thrift store and laundromat facility Monday in Durant, Miss., as she cleans up from a possible tornado hit on Sunday morning.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States