Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Soaked Appalachia begins cleanup

Rescue efforts ongoing; dozens reported killed

- By Dylan Lovan and Bruce Schreiner

PRESTONBUR­G, Ky. — Some residents of Appalachia returned to flood-ravaged homes and communitie­s on Saturday to shovel mud and debris and to salvage what they could, while Kentucky’s governor said search-and-rescue operations were ongoing in the region swamped by torrential rains days earlier that led to deadly flash flooding.

Rescue crews were continuing the struggle to get into hard-hit areas, some of them among the poorest places in America. Dozens of deaths have been confirmed, and the number is expected to grow.

In the tiny community of Wayland, Phillip Michael Caudill was working Saturday to clean up debris and recover what he could from the home he shares with his wife and three children. The waters had receded from the house but left a mess behind along with questions about what he and his family will do next.

“We’re just hoping we can get some help,” said Caudill, who is staying with his family at Jenny Wiley State Park in a free room, for now.

Caudill, a firefighte­r in the nearby Garrett community, went out on rescues around 1 a.m. Thursday but had to ask to leave around 3 a.m. so he could go home, where waters were rapidly rising.

“That’s what made it so tough for me,” he said. “Here I am, sitting there, watching my house become immersed in water and you got people begging for help. And I couldn’t help” because he was tending to his own family.

The water was up to his knees when he arrived home, and he had to wade across the yard and carry two of his kids out to the car.

In Garrett on Saturday, couches, tables and pillows soaked by flooding were stacked in yards along the foothills of the mountainou­s region as people worked to clear out debris and shovel mud from driveways and roads under now-blue skies.

 ?? Timothy D. Easley
The Associated Press ?? Members of the local Mennonite community remove mud-filled debris from homes following flooding at Ogden Hollar in Hindman, Ky., on Saturday.
Timothy D. Easley The Associated Press Members of the local Mennonite community remove mud-filled debris from homes following flooding at Ogden Hollar in Hindman, Ky., on Saturday.

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