Houston Chronicle Sunday

Floods in central U.S. spur evacuation call

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TULSA, Okla. — Officials on Saturday warned some Tulsa residents to prepare to head to higher ground because old levees holding back the swollen Arkansas River are stressed and more rain is expected for the flood-weary region.

The river was four feet above flood stage on Friday and was already causing flooding in parts of Oklahoma’s second-largest city, including in south Tulsa where the murky brown water had inundated low-lying neighborho­ods and crept right up to the River Spirit Hotel and Casino, which closed for the weekend.

City officials said at a news conference Saturday that people living west of downtown should consider leaving for higher ground, even though the levees aren’t currently considered to be in danger of failing. If an evacuation becomes necessary, it would need to happen quickly, they said.

Mayor G.T. Bynum said the levees were built in the 1940s and haven’t had to hold back this much water since 1986. Officials also said they don’t expect the river to recede in Tulsa until Wednesday at the earliest, pushing back their initial estimate by three days.

“The level of risk you have in staying there is very high,” Bynum said. “That’s an unnecessar­y risk.”

About 55 miles southeast of Tulsa, the small town of Braggs was completely surrounded by water and without power, according to Oklahoma Department of Emergency Management spokeswoma­n Keli Cain.

Cain said it’s not clear how many of the town’s approximat­ely 260 residents evacuated before the flooding, but water rescue teams deployed to assist there, as well as in other areas of Muskogee, Wagoner, Rogers and Nowata counties.

Officials in Muskogee and Wagoner counties urged voluntary evacuation­s of low-lying areas along the Arkansas River, where water could be seen up to roofs, as well as along the rising Verdigris River.

Storms have buffeted the central Plains and Midwest all spring, inundating the ground and leaving rain with nowhere to go but into already bloated waterways. The region’s most recent spate of bad weather and flooding has been blamed for at least nine deaths.

Downriver in northweste­rn Arkansas, between 100 and 200 residents had already evacuated their homes in the state’s secondlarg­est city of Fort Smith, which is about 100 miles southeast of Tulsa. Karen Santos, a spokeswoma­n for the city of roughly 80,000 people, said at least one house along the river had been completely submerged.

Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson declared a state of emergency Friday night to free up state agencies to do what they can to assist flooded areas.

Additional storms are possible in Arkansas, Oklahoma and Kansas over the next week, according to the latest forecasts.

 ?? Nick Oxford / New York Times ?? Rick Wilson of Muskogee, Okla., carries a container of belongings through floodwater­s from the Arkansas River.
Nick Oxford / New York Times Rick Wilson of Muskogee, Okla., carries a container of belongings through floodwater­s from the Arkansas River.

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