Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Flooding threatens Southeast

Water service cut; some schools close

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SUMMERVILL­E, Ga. — Flood watches were in effect in the U.S. Southeast and much of the Northeast on Monday as forecaster­s warned of the possibilit­y of torrential downpours on Labor Day across already saturated ground.

Among the hardest-hit areas in this weekend’s storms was northwest Georgia, where 12 inches of rain fell in some spots, forecaster­s said.

The flooding knocked out water service to parts of Georgia’s Chattooga County, where the school system called off classes for the next couple of days, authoritie­s said.

“Our main thrust right now is getting our water situation back in hand,” said Earle Rainwater, who owns Rainwater Funeral Home in Summervill­e and serves as the Chattooga County coroner.

“Without water, you can’t do anything,” he said Monday. “We don’t have water except for bottled water and what’s in the creeks.”

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp on Sunday declared a state of emergency in Chattooga and Floyd counties. That directed all state resources to help with “preparatio­n, response and recovery activities.”

In Chattooga County, several people had to be rescued from their homes Sunday, especially in lower-lying areas of the county, Rainwater said. “They used Jon Boats, they used kayaks, they used anything that would float.”

Waves of showers and storms were expected to develop Monday in the region, as moisture from the Gulf of Mexico continues to stream across the South and into the Northeast, the National Weather Service said. Some training storms — storms that drop several inches of rain as they move over the same areas like train cars — were also possible, the weather service said.

The chance for flash flooding extended into the Northeast, into Pennsylvan­ia, parts of southern New England and the New York City area, the weather service said. Radar showed a strong band of storms traveling northeast just inland from Pennsylvan­ia through Rhode Island and into Massachuse­tts.

Life- threatenin­g flash flooding was reported Monday in the Rhode Island cities of Providence and Cranston, the National Weather Service reported. While there had been no reports of injuries in the area, a number of roads were closed by Monday afternoon, including a section of Interstate 95, and Route 10 — one of the main arteries into and out of Providence.

Up to 4 inches of rain had already fallen in some areas by late afternoon and additional flooding was possible.

Parts of Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, North Carolina, South Carolina, Kentucky, Virginia and West Virginia were under flash flood watches through Monday evening. Rhode Island, Connecticu­t and parts of Massachuse­tts, New Hampshire and Maine remain under flash flood watches into today.

In Georgia, church pastors and volunteers planned to distribute water Monday in the small towns of Summervill­e and Trion, according to the Chattooga County Emergency Management Agency.

“We’ve never had anything like this before,” Summervill­e Mayor Harry Harvey said.

After visiting the community’s flooded water treatment plant Monday morning, Harvey said, “Things are not as bad as we thought they were, or as bad as they could be.”

Workers were at the site Monday assessing the damage. By late Monday or this morning, “we should have a much better assessment as to what needs to be done,” Harvey said.

The Chattooga County School System will be closed today and Wednesday because of the flooding, Superinten­dent Jared Hosmer said.

“Without water, we are unable to flush toilets, wash hands, drink from the fountains or prepare lunches,” Hosmer said Monday in announcing the decision.

Chattooga County, about 90 miles northwest of Atlanta, is home to about 25,000 people.

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