Los Angeles Times

Midwest f looding called ‘historic’

‘Historic flooding’ shuts down roads, forces evacuation­s and cuts off access.

- BY MARK BERMAN Berman writes for the Washington Post.

Governors of several states declare emergencie­s after a powerful storm.

Authoritie­s in the Midwest declared states of emergency amid what they called “historic” flooding, which forecaster­s warned would stretch through the weekend.

The flooding shut down roads, forced scores of people to evacuate their homes and cut off access to some towns and cities.

In Nebraska, which has seen some of the most significan­t flooding, Gov. Pete Ricketts said the impacts of the “devastatin­g flooding ... could last for quite some time.”

Even the forecaster­s were not immune: The National Weather Service in Omaha reported Friday that it had to evacuate its offices because of rising waters.

Forecaster­s said Saturday that at least five states were still facing the flood threat.

“Major and historical river flooding will continue this weekend focused across Iowa, southern Minnesota and Wisconsin, eastern Nebraska and southeast South Dakota,” the National Weather Service reported.

The surging water was fueled by a powerful winter storm — a “bomb cyclone” — that battered the region with strong winds and heavy rainfall.

The resulting flooding was particular­ly intense because the heavy rain fell on snow that had not melted yet, said Brian Barjenbruc­h, the science and operations officer for the weather service in Omaha.

“And the ground was completely frozen,” he said in an interview. “It’s almost like all of this rain was falling, melting snow, and every last drop had to run off.”

Barjenbruc­h said the results have been incredibly damaging in parts of eastern Nebraska and western Iowa.

“It is some of the worst flooding that we’ve seen in many years,” Barjenbruc­h said. “In some locations it’s the worst flooding on record on many of these river gauges.”

Along with Ricketts, governors in Wisconsin and South Dakota declared emergencie­s, while Iowa’s Gov. Kim Reynolds issued a wave of disaster proclamati­ons.

South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem said she signed an emergency declaratio­n to free up more state money for people affected by the storm and the flooding.

“The storms this week have been extremely difficult for many of our communitie­s,” Noem said in a statement. “This has been a statewide emergency with people impacted by heavy snow, high winds, rain, and freezing rain.”

In his emergency declaratio­n, Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers said the storm had “moved across the entire state of Wisconsin” between Wednesday and Friday. In its wake, he said, water was “rising swiftly.”

“The warm temperatur­es and rain the last few days have caused much of the heavy snowpack and ice to melt resulting in flooding, ice jams, and rivers and creeks to rise,” Evers said in a statement.

In Nebraska, scores of residents rushed into shelters while state troopers fanned out for water rescues, officials said.

“Nebraska has experience­d historic flooding and extreme weather in nearly every region of the state,” Ricketts wrote in a statement on Twitter. He issued a disaster declaratio­n on Tuesday.

President Trump on Friday afternoon said he had spoken to Ricketts about the situation.

“The people of Nebraska & across the Midwest, especially the Farmers & Ranchers, are feeling the impacts from severe weather,” he tweeted.

The flooding had closed off main routes through parts of the region, said Jennifer Arthur, 44, a bartender at Jack’s Place in Omaha.

“You go a couple of miles ... you can’t make it very far,” Arthur said. “You just can’t get into town.”

Arthur said that Jack’s had additional customers because the water had closed some other bars and restaurant­s — and that the flooding was the main topic of conversati­on.

“There’s a lot of people impacted that had to get out real fast,” she said. “A lot of people are going to friends’ houses, hotels.”

Officials said the flooding has caused severe damage in some areas, tearing apart pieces of roadways and bridges.

“The power of water is really quite impressive,” said Barjenbruc­h.

“When that water moves out of the channel it is normally in, it interacts with roads, bridges in ways it doesn’t normally. When that happens ... we have roads fail, bridges fail, we’ve even had dams fail in far northeaste­rn Nebraska.”

Barjenbruc­h added: “The power of water should never be underestim­ated.”

Forecaster­s have also warned that, because of significan­t precipitat­ion during winter and because of what Washington Post’s weather analysts called “an active spring storm track through the nation’s midsection,” this flooding in the Midwest may only be the start of a painful flood season.

 ?? Scott P. Yates Rockford Register Star ?? FLOODWATER­S lap close to homes in Freeport, Ill. The surging water was fueled by a winter storm forecaster­s called a “bomb cyclone.”
Scott P. Yates Rockford Register Star FLOODWATER­S lap close to homes in Freeport, Ill. The surging water was fueled by a winter storm forecaster­s called a “bomb cyclone.”

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