The Palm Beach Post

Heavy rain from Cindy causes minor flooding across South

The Mississipp­i coast alone received nearly a foot of rain.

- By Jay Reeves Associated Press

BIRMINGHAM, ALA. — Floodwater­s from Tropical Storm Cindy covered timberland and fields across the rural Deep South on Saturday, but the sun peeked out enough to offer hope that the worst was over.

Swollen by heavy rains and flowing quickly, the Chickasawh­ay River was out of its banks near the southeaste­rn Mississipp­i town of Leakesvill­e and nearly 9 feet above flood level with the water still rising. An abandoned bridge spanning the river collapsed earlier in the week.

The National Weather Service said the Mississipp­i coast received nearly a foot of rain over the four-day period ending Saturday, the most in the region.

As much as another 3 inches was forecast around Leakesvill­e, a town of 900 people, by today, possibly making flooding conditions worse, said Trent Richardson, emergency management director for Greene County.

Storms extended from southern Louisiana to northeaste­rn Georgia, but Richardson said he was encouraged by occasional sunshine and revised projection­s that showed the Chickasawh­ay cresting lower than expected by mid-week.

“We’re good right now, but I’m always edgy,” Richardson said. “Weather is not an exact science. There could be a foot of water that’s unforeseen.”

Rainfall totals of 6 inches or more was common in southeaste­rn Mississipp­i and southweste­rn Alabama, the weather service said. The agency reported minor flooding at more than 30 locations in Louisiana, Mississipp­i, Alabama and the Florida Panhandle. Water covered a street in Merrill, Miss., about 25 miles from Leakesvill­e.

With remnants of the storm pushing through the Northeast, additional minor flooding was reported along the storm’s track in Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio and Pennsylvan­ia.

Forecaster­s said rough surf and rip currents were still a risk along the Gulf Coast, but skies were mostly clear and many beaches were full of weekend visitors.

A 10-year-old Missouri boy was struck and killed by a log thrown on to an Alabama beach by a wave as Cindy moved through the Gulf, and authoritie­s said a man drowned Friday while trying to help children in rough surf in the same area.

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 ?? BUTCH DILL / AP ?? The Pascagoula River floods a structure at Roberts Fishing Camp Saturday near Escatawpa, Miss., after Tropical Storm Cindy dropped heavy rain there.
BUTCH DILL / AP The Pascagoula River floods a structure at Roberts Fishing Camp Saturday near Escatawpa, Miss., after Tropical Storm Cindy dropped heavy rain there.

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