The Columbus Dispatch

Tennessee floods shatter families

More than 20 killed in deluge; dozens missing

- John Bacon and Yue Stella Yu

WAVERLY, Tenn. – Search-and-rescue teams, volunteers and dismayed family members franticall­y picked through the saturated ruins of dozens of homes Monday, holding out hope that loved ones missing after Saturday’s flooding would be found alive.

At least 21 people were killed when walls of water powered by up to 17 inches of rain roared through rural Humphreys County, home to about 20,000 people 70 miles west of Nashville.

Twenty deaths were within the city of Waverly, the county seat.

Dozens of people were missing Monday, county Emergency Management Agency spokespers­on Grey Collier said.

Roads were swamped, power lines downed and cellphone towers damaged, complicati­ng efforts to find the missing. Emergency crews began damage assessment Monday, but debris removal will not begin anytime soon, Collier said.

Sheriff Chris Davis said it would take weeks, if not months, to recover and rebuild infrastruc­ture. Federal disaster aid will be crucial to repairing or rebuilding structures such as schools, he said.

“What we need right now is patience,” Davis said.

Some residents offered to help in any way they could on the sheriff’s office Facebook page. Others listed the names of people and families who were missing, some adding places where first responders might look to find them.

“We are a strong community full of great people. We will persevere through this,” the sheriff’s office said in a post. “There is more work to be done to help our neighbors and bring missing loved ones home.”

The unrelentin­g rains Saturday overwhelme­d a swath of Middle Tennessee, including Dickson, Hickman, Humphreys and Houston counties. Humphreys County was hit particular­ly hard.

Gov. Bill Lee toured Waverly Elementary School on Sunday, 4 feet of water having receded from the building. The school’s playground was in splinters, its mangled metal gates twisted into odd angles.

Lee described the scene as a “devastatin­g picture of loss and heartache” but praised the outpouring of help and the swift response of emergency crews.

“It was dramatic to hear the stories about how fast this happened,” Lee said. “They would see water in their yard, and within minutes, it was coming in their home.”

Business owner Kansas Klein said his pizzeria was still standing but had been rendered a total loss by the floodwaters that reached 7 feet inside the building.

“It was devastatin­g. Buildings were knocked down, half of them were destroyed,” Klein said. “People were pulling out bodies of people who had drowned.”

The dead included twin babies wrenched from their father’s arms, according to surviving family members, and a foreman at country music star Loretta Lynn’s ranch. In Waverly, a town of 4,300 people, the pummeling rain swept homes from their foundation­s and carried vehicles off streets.

When the rain turned into a river, Brittney Leann Mccord held on to her son for as long as she could. She wrapped Kellon Cole Burrow, 2, in her arms and tried to hold on to a clotheslin­e outside her apartment – and keep hold of her other four children as the floodwaters rose. Kellon was pulled away by the current.

“The last time I saw him was when we put him to bed,” stepfather Kalaub Brian Mccord said through tears.

Karen Phair, 61, said her family’s home was ripped apart by the waters. Her grandmothe­r’s former home was carried away by the raging floods.

“It’s just unbelievab­le,” she whispered. “It’s a war zone.”

 ?? ANDREW NELLES/THE TENNESSEAN VIA AP ?? Up to 17 inches of rain fell in Humphreys County in less than 24 hours Saturday.
ANDREW NELLES/THE TENNESSEAN VIA AP Up to 17 inches of rain fell in Humphreys County in less than 24 hours Saturday.

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