The Mercury News

Rising water in capital creates a ‘precarious situation’

- By Rogelio V. Solis and Rebecca Santana

JACKSON, MISS. >> With the waters in the Pearl River continuing to rise in and around Mississipp­i’s capital city and more rain on the way this week, the governor warned residents that it would be days before floodwater­s start to recede.

Gov. Tate Reeves said Sunday morning that the Pearl would continue to rise throughout the day, and he warned that the state faces a “precarious situation that can turn at any moment.”

In one Jackson neighborho­od, residents paddled canoes, kayaks and small fishing boats to check on their houses, giving lifts to neighbors. Some were able to get inside while others peeked into the windows to see what, if any damage, had been done inside.

Outside, floodwater­s lapped at mailboxes, street signs and cars that had been left in driveways.

In a bit of good news, officials at a reservoir upriver of the capitol said Sunday that water levels in the reservoir had stabilized, allowing them to send less water downriver. The National Weather Service, which had been anticipati­ng the river would crest Sunday at 38 feet, on Sunday slightly reduced that to 37.5 feet. The river is now anticipate­d to crest today.

But even with that developmen­t, officials urged residents to pay attention to evacuation orders, check on road closures before traveling and stay out of floodwater­s, warning that even seemingly placid waters could mask fast-moving currents and pollution. Law enforcemen­t officials went door to door in affected areas, telling people to evacuate, Reeves said.

Rescuers performed four assisted evacuation­s Saturday, although they said none were needed overnight.

“We expect the river to continue to rise over the next 24 hours or so, “Reeves said at a news conference in Jackson. “We are not out of the woods yet.”

Jackson Mayor Chokwe Lumumba said power had been shut off to 504 residences as a safety precaution.

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