San Antonio Express-News

Springing to their own defense

- By John Ra and Rebecca Reynolds

Girls practice martial arts Monday during a training session in Kabul, Afghanista­n.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Kentucky firefighte­r Eddie Stacy was turning his firetruck around in the dark while responding to storm damage when he noticed a tiny light coming from the flooded Red River.

It was a cellphone a woman was waving from a car inundated with water that was rising by the minute.

Stacy and other members of the Hazel Green Fire Department sprang into action Sunday night, pulling five people from the car where water was up to the dashboard. Among those rescued were a 17-month-old boy and a woman who appeared to be having a seizure, Stacy said in a telephone interview Monday.

“We don’t do too much training on this water rescue,” Stacy said. “Instinct, it just kicks in.”

Heavy thundersto­rms pounded parts of Appalachia on Sunday and Monday, sending rivers out of their banks and leading to multiple water rescues, mudslides, road closures and power outages, officials said.

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear declared a state of emergency Monday because of heavy rainfall across the state.

He said the Kentucky National Guard was activated and was assisting with high water emergencie­s.

Stacy was part of a storm-response unit cutting down a tree that had fallen onto a road in Wolfe County about 75 miles southeast of Lexington. But a mudslide started and Stacy was forced to move his firetruck.

As he was turning around, Stacy noticed something in the floodwater­s just down the road — a woman sitting on a stalled car’s door window, waving her cellphone flashlight and yelling for help.

“Nobody could hear from where she was,” Stacy said. “That little flashlight when I was driving down the road just caught my attention. It was God, I tell you. It was God to have me in that place where I was supposed to be.”

Stacy attached a 100-foot rope to the truck and himself and helped retrieve the car’s occupants. Wolfe County Sheriff Chris Carson used a front-end loader to lift out the woman who had the seizure. She made a full recovery.

A similar rescue occurred in central Tennessee, where four adults and an infant were removed from a partially submerged truck that slid off a water-covered bridge in Dekalb County, news outlets reported. In addition, a child was injured in Nashville when he tripped over a downed power line while playing outside, officials said.

In Lee County, Kentucky, some homes in Beattyvill­e were evacuated Monday. County Judge-executive Chuck Caudill told WYMT-TV that rescue crews used county dump trucks to help people escape their homes.

Severe or moderate flooding was forecast Monday on several rivers in West Virginia and eastern Kentucky, including different locations along the Kentucky River southeast of Lexington, the National Weather Service said.

In West Virginia, flooding hit some areas that were ravaged by power outages from ice storms last month. Floodwater­s inundated roads in more than a dozen counties, highways officials said.

The National Guard assisted with some evacuation­s Sunday night in the Dunlow area of Wayne County. And about a dozen people had to be assisted at a church in the Kanawha County community of Cross Lanes on Monday after high water cut off access to a road, WCHS-TV reported.

In Roane County, residents in one public service district were asked to conserve drinking water after a flooded water plant broke down and was inaccessib­le. The Clay Roane Public Service District said in a social media post that water tanks were dangerousl­y low and cannot be refilled until the floodwater­s recede and the problem is repaired.

Some schools closed or delayed classes because of flooding concerns and about 13,000 customers were without power in Kentucky and West Virginia, according to a utility tracking service.

 ?? Rahmat Gul / Associated Press ??
Rahmat Gul / Associated Press

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