Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Weeks of rain flooding sections of South

Mississipp­i governor declares emergency

- Doyle Rice, Luke Ramseth and Wilton Jackson

JACKSON, Miss. – Weeks of heavy rain have inundated a large portion of the southern U.S., bringing near-record flooding to Mississipp­i and Tennessee.

In Jackson, hundreds of residents either watched their homes flood over the weekend or worried their residences would soon be drenched. The Pearl River crested Monday at 36.8 feet, its thirdhighe­st level ever recorded.

Calling the Jackson floods “historic” and “unpreceden­ted,” Mississipp­i Gov. Tate Reeves said at a Sunday media conference that “we do not anticipate this situation to end anytime soon. It will be days before we are out of the woods and the waters recede.”

Reeves declared a state of emergency Saturday because of the floods.

More wet weather was on the way: Rain showers were to develop Monday night over the Mississipp­i River Valley, further saturating an already soggy South, the Weather Channel said.

The National Weather Service said that this entire area is quite soaked and any additional rainfall may lead to more runoff issues and additional flooding.

Residents began filling sandbags and preparing their homes, businesses and churches for the flooding earlier last week after multiple days of heavy rain, AccuWeathe­r said.

Jackson resident Mark Wakefield knows what it takes to rebuild after flooding: His in-laws’ home in Jackson has flooded four times. The worst was in 1979, when the house was 8 feet underwater. The home has flooded again, he said, and this time they might not come back.

“It’s no fun,” Wakefield said. “Once the water’s in the house, we’re looking at months of cleanup and reconstruc­tion. It’s nothing life-threatenin­g to us, we’re careful enough ... but it’s just extremely frustratin­g and disgusting to have to go through this.”

Nearly 2,400 structures across the three Mississipp­i counties closest to the Pearl River and its Barnett Reservoir – Hinds, Rankin and Madison – could get water indoors or be surrounded by floods, said Malary White, of the Mississipp­i Emergency Management Agency.

Experts originally projected the Pearl

River to crest at 38 feet.

While the focus now is on the Jackson area, the heavy rains and flooding have affected a much larger swath of the state. State emergency management officials said they had received preliminar­y damage reports from 11 counties connected with the severe weather that hit the state starting Feb. 10.

In Tennessee, February’s rains have been “400% of normal, and we have more coming in this week,” Tennessee Valley Authority spokesman Jim Hopson said. “It’s kind of a never-ending battle.

“Mother Nature is really the one in charge – we simply try to manage what Mother Nature gives us, to minimize the impacts along the 652-mile Tennessee River and its thousands of miles of tributarie­s and streams,” he said.

The Southern flooding could be a precursor to another disastrous year for flooding, especially in the central U.S.

In fact, there are troubling signs that spring could bring widespread flooding in the nation’s midsection somewhat reminiscen­t of last year’s massive event, the Weather Channel warned.

Long-range flood forecasts issued recently by the National Weather Service said there is an above-average chance of widespread flooding this spring along stretches of the Mississipp­i River, Missouri River, Red River and other tributarie­s in the northern and central U.S.

Flooding last year in the Missouri, Mississipp­i and Arkansas River basins were responsibl­e for 12 deaths and an estimated $20 billion in damage, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion.

 ?? BARBARA GAUNTT/CLARION LEDGER ?? Kathy Covington, center, watches floodwater from the Pearl River rush through her Florence, Miss., yard Sunday. A stranger, right, stopped to offer support.
BARBARA GAUNTT/CLARION LEDGER Kathy Covington, center, watches floodwater from the Pearl River rush through her Florence, Miss., yard Sunday. A stranger, right, stopped to offer support.

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