Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Floods leave behind huge cleanup effort in Ill., Mo.

- By Jim Salter and Jim Suhr Associated Press

KINCAID, Ill. — The Mississipp­i River and many of its tributarie­s continued their retreat Sunday from historic and deadly winter flooding, leaving amid the silt a massive cleanup and recovery effort likely to take weeks if not months.

The flood, fueled by more than 10 inches of rain over a three-day period that began Christmas Day, is blamed for 25 deaths in Illinois and Missouri, reflecting Sunday’s discovery of the body of a second teenager who drowned in central Illinois’ Christian County.

The Mississipp­i River was receding except in the southern tip of both states.

The Meramec River, the St. Louis-area tributary of the Mississipp­i that caused a lot of damage last week, already was below flood stage in the hard-hit Missouri towns of Pacific and Eureka and is dropping elsewhere.

But worries surfaced anew Sunday along the still-rising Illinois River north of St. Louis, where crests near the west-central Illinois towns of Valley City, Meredosia, Beardstown and Havana were to approach records before receding in coming days.

In Kincaid, a central Illinois town of 1,400 near the Sangamon River’s south fork, Gov. Bruce Rauner toured flood-damaged homes Sunday as Sharon Stivers and other residents piled ruined furniture, appliances and clothes along the street for disposal crews to pick up. Mike Crews, Christian County’s emergency manager, said the worst of the inundation appeared to be over, “until the new weather comes,” citing the prospect of potentiall­y heavy rain later in the week.

Stivers

shares

home with her 45-year-old daughter battling breast cancer, along with a granddaugh­ter and four dogs. Floodwater­s reached 4 feet inside their home, located in an area where flood insurance isn’t available.

“Am I mad?” she asked. “I lost my home. My daughter has cancer and lost her home. Am I mad? When I’m not crying I am.”

In Illinois’ Morgan County, home to the 1,000residen­t village of Meredosia, locals were keeping wary eyes on levees fortified with 50,000 sandbags. As of midday Sunday, the Illinois at Meredosia was more than 10 feet above flood stage and pressing toward an expected crest Tuesday roughly a half-foot short of the record set in July.

President Barack Obama signed a federal emergency declaratio­n Saturday for Missouri, allowing federal aid to be used to help state and local response efforts. It also allows the Federal Emergency Management Agency to coordinate disaster relief efforts. Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon had asked for the help.

St. Louis-area cleanup largely was focused around the Meramec.

Two wastewater treatment plants were so damaged by the floodwater­s that raw sewage into the river.

Hundreds of people were evacuated in the Missouri communitie­s of Pacific, Eureka, Valley Park and Arnold, where many homes took in water.

In southeast Missouri, up to 30 homes and several businesses were damaged in Cape Girardeau, a community of nearly 40,000 that is mostly protected by a flood wall. The Mississipp­i peaked at 48.9 feet Friday night, four-tenths of a foot above the 1993 record, but short of the projected 50-foot mark. Nearby levee breaks in other places kept the crest down.

Amtrak service between St. Louis and Kansas City was back in business Sunday, four days after high water that reached the tracks at some locations forced the passenger service to be halted.

Moderate Mississipp­i River flooding was expected in Memphis, Tenn. The National Weather Service issued a flood advisory for the Cumberland River at Dover, Tenn., through Monday evening.

Minor flooding along the Ohio River was affecting the Kentucky cities of Owensboro and Paducah, and the crest wasn’t expected until Thursday.

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 ?? SETH PERLMAN/AP ?? Ruined belongings line the street for disposal Sunday in Kincaid, Ill. Floodwater­s hit 4 feet in one resident’s home.
SETH PERLMAN/AP Ruined belongings line the street for disposal Sunday in Kincaid, Ill. Floodwater­s hit 4 feet in one resident’s home.

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