Las Vegas Review-Journal

Midwestern states hit by rain, flooding; one dead

-

said. His name was not immediatel­y released.

About 40 miles south in Crawford County, two BNSF Railway locomotive­s and five cars derailed. The crew wasn’t injured, but one of the fuel tanks ruptured, spilling about 1,000 gallons of diesel fuel — some into the Mississipp­i River, the railroad said. BNSF crews placed booms downstream to capture the fuel. Wisconsin emergency officials said 15 people who lived nearby were evacuated as a precaution.

Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker declared a state of emergency for 13 counties to help local government­s pay for the costs of damage and cleanup to public infrastruc­ture.

In Minnesota, the northern suburbs in the Twin Cities area saw up to 10 inches of rain. Seventy miles south, Waseca saw nearly 14 inches of rain over two days. Basements were flooded across the community, and several residents were evacuated.

“We’ve never had it like this, never,” Joyce Brown, who has lived in Waseca for 42 years, said about the standing water on her property. “Never never never never never.”

To the southwest, the city of Faribault declared a state of emergency as it worked to hold back the Cannon and Straight Rivers. Crews placed sandbags to protect the Faribault Woolen Mill, a popular tourism destinatio­n, and built a berm to keep the water out of the Caves of Faribault, which are known for their award-winning, cave-aged blue cheeses.

The water was maybe ankle deep when Glen Steberg went into his barn Thursday morning along the Zumbro River in Wanamingo, about 60 miles south of Minneapoli­s.

An hour later, his son and their neighbor were chest-deep in dark, cold water, rescuing six calves and about a dozen steers.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States