The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

More storms bring renewed flood threat

- By John Raby

Thundersto­rms on Friday brought a renewed threat of flooding to parts of Kentucky ravaged by high water a week ago.

The National Weather Service issued a flood watch through Sunday evening for nearly the entire state.

As residents continued cleaning up from the late July floods that killed at least 37 people, rain started falling on already saturated ground in eastern Kentucky late Friday morning. Some places could receive up to 3 inches of rain by Friday night, and the storm system wasn’t expected to let up until at least this evening, the weather service said.

Due to unsafe travel conditions, Gov. Andy Beshear canceled visits to two floodravag­ed counties Friday.

Last week’s storm in eastern Kentucky sent floodwater­s as high as rooftops. In the days afterward, more than 1,300 people were rescued as teams searched in boats and combed debrisclog­ged creek banks.

Many residents were still waiting for their utilities to be restored. About 3,000 Kentucky customers remained without electricit­y on Friday. Some entire water systems were severed or heavily damaged, prompting a significan­t response from the National Guard and others to distribute bottled water.

President Joe Biden declared a federal disaster to direct relief money to counties flooded after 8 to 10½ inches of rain fell in 48 hours last week in the Appalachia­n mountain region. Federal financial assistance also was being offered to many residents for repairs to privately owned access roads and bridges. The state also was offering disaster unemployme­nt assistance.

The weather service also posted flood watches for much of West Virginia and through the Washington, D.C., area.

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