USA TODAY US Edition

More severe weather drenches Midwest

Storms spawn Arkansas tornado, strain levees along Mississipp­i River

- Doug Stanglin

Severe weather moved eastward Thursday, one day after at least four people were injured when a tornado ripped the roof from an apartment building in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, as a powerful line of thundersto­rms moved through the area.

The system threatened heavy rainfall from southeaste­rn Texas into Arkansas and Louisiana into early this weekend.

The National Weather Service forecast possible severe thundersto­rms, including large to very large hail, damaging winds and isolated tornadoes along the same track. The wild weather has forced people from their homes in Kansas, soaked waterlogge­d Houston once again and strained levees along the surging Mississipp­i River.

The National Weather Service predicted the Missouri River would crest Thursday in St. Joseph, Missouri, at a level that would cause parkland and a residentia­l area to flood.

The weather service said the thundersto­rms will spread across the Great Lakes region, Ohio and Tennessee Valleys and into the Lower Mississipp­i Valley and Southern Plains.

The prospects of heavy rain could cause flash flooding. The highest risk for excessive rainfall will be in portions of southeaste­rn Texas and Louisiana, according to the weather service.

In Arkansas, about 150 people in Pine Bluff had to take shelter at the convention center and other sites after the twister Wednesday night ripped the roof off an apartment complex about 40 miles southeast of Little Rock.

At least four people were injured, authoritie­s said.

Resident Carla Jackson told the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette the storm moved in quickly.

“First there were real high winds and then a loud boom, and next thing you know, the lights started blinking. We heard the transforme­r blow, then another transforme­r blow, and then it just went black,” she said.

In northwest Missouri’s Holt County, Emergency Management Director Tom Bullock said a few people who moved back home after March’s flooding were forced out again late Wednesday by rising water. His own home is unreachabl­e.

“The water won’t go away,” he said.

In Texas, the body of a man was recovered Wednesday in Lady Bird Lake in Austin after the victim was swept away in rising waters, KXAN reported. Police were alerted after the body was spotted floating downstream under the South First Street Bridge.

At least four tornadoes were reported Wednesday, two in Brazos County, Texas, and two in Louisiana, according to the Storm Prediction Center.

A possible tornado destroyed a trailer home in Ruston, Louisiana, where two people were killed at the site of last month’s deadly tornado.

Across the Midwest, flooding has caused billions of dollars of damage to farmland, homes and businesses. Some rivers have been above flood stage for more than six weeks.

“First there were real high winds and then a loud boom . ... Then it just went black.” Carla Jackson Pine Bluff, Ark.

 ?? ROGELIO V. SOLIS/AP ?? Residents can only watch as the waters rise in Pearl, Miss., where strong winds, heavy rain and tornado warnings piled on the misery.
ROGELIO V. SOLIS/AP Residents can only watch as the waters rise in Pearl, Miss., where strong winds, heavy rain and tornado warnings piled on the misery.

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