Midwest fights back swollen rivers

Death toll at least 3; farmland drenched

4/22/2013
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Bob Bailey tinkers with a pump as he tries to keep floodwater from the Mississippi River out of one of his rental properties. The town’s makeshift levee appeared to be holding Sunday. The river was expected to crest today.
Bob Bailey tinkers with a pump as he tries to keep floodwater from the Mississippi River out of one of his rental properties. The town’s makeshift levee appeared to be holding Sunday. The river was expected to crest today.

CLARKSVILLE, Mo. — Residents in several communities along the Mississippi River were mostly successful in fighting flooding on Sunday, but an ominous forecast and additional snow in the upper Midwest tempered any feelings of victory.

The surging Mississippi was at or near crest at several places from the Quad Cities south to near St. Louis — some reaching 10-12 feet above flood stage.

Problems were plentiful.

Hundreds of thousands of acres of farmland were swamped as planting season approaches. Three people have died. Roads and bridges were closed, including sections of major highways like U.S. 61 in Iowa and Missouri and crossings at Quincy, Ill., and Louisiana, Mo.

The U.S. Coast Guard said 114 barges broke loose near St. Louis on Saturday night and four hit the Jefferson Barracks Bridge in St. Louis County.

The bridge was closed about six hours for inspection but reopened around 8 a.m. Sunday. Most of the runaway barges were corralled, but at least 10 sank and two others were unaccounted for, Coast Guard Lt. Colin Fogarty said.

Two of the confirmed flood-related deaths occurred near the same spot in Indiana; another was in Missouri. In all three cases, vehicles were swept off the road in flash floods.

High water could be responsible for two more, both in Illinois, where a decomposed body was found Thursday in an Oak Brook creek and a body was found Saturday in the Mississippi River at Cora. Investigations continue.

The danger is far from over, as spots south of St. Louis aren’t expected to crest until late this week.

Significant flooding is possible in places like Ste. Genevieve, Mo., Cape Girardeau, Mo., and Cairo, Ill.

Adding to concern is a forecast that calls for heavy rain tonight and Tuesday throughout much of the Midwest.

National Weather Service meteorologist Julie Phillipson said an inch of rain is likely in many places and more in some areas. Rain is forecast from Wisconsin through Missouri.

“That’s not what we want to see when we have this kind of flooding, that’s for sure,” Ms. Phillipson said.

Harley-Davidson riders and bicyclists zipped through Grafton, Ill., a tourist town 40 miles north of St. Louis, many pausing to snap pictures of the swollen river.

Floodwaters were lapping against the side of Grafton’s Artisan Village, a flea market-type business for artists. Owner Marty Harp, 53, sipped a Miller Lite as he cast a wary eye to the sky.

“If we can hold off the crest and it doesn’t rain for a couple of days, it’ll be OK,” Mr. Harp said.

But anxiety looms regarding the heavy snow the northern Midwest has received this month and what happens when it melts and makes its way into tributaries of the Missouri and Mississippi rivers.

Forecasters said up to 6 inches of new snow was possible in the Black Hills area of South Dakota through this morning.

Hundreds of miles to the southeast, in La Grange, Mo., Lewis County emergency management director David Keith wasn’t bothered by the soggy forecast. Sandbags were holding back the murky Mississippi from La Grange City Hall, a bank and a handful of threatened homes. The water was receding.

“What we’re worried about now is all that snow melt in North and South Dakota and Minnesota,” Keith said.

AccuWeather meteorologist Alan Reppert said it may stay cold long enough up north to make for a gradual melt, giving the rivers time to thin out. Of greater concern, he said, is the Red River in North Dakota, which could see significant flooding in the coming weeks.

Along the Mississippi, a handful of river towns are most affected by the high waters — places like Clarksville, Mo., and Grafton that have chosen against flood walls or levees.

By Sunday, sandbagging had all but stopped in Clarksville, evidence of the confidence that the makeshift levee would hold.

The river was at 34.7 feet Sunday, nearly 10 feet above the 25-foot flood stage — a somewhat arbitrary term the National Weather Service defines as the point when “water surface level begins to create a hazard to lives, property or commerce” — and expected to rise another foot before cresting today.

Many towns on smaller rivers in other states were dealing with floodwaters, too.

In Grand Rapids, Mich., Mayor George Heartwell declared a state of emergency as the flooding Grand River poured into the basements of several hotels and other downtown buildings.

In Indiana, high water was topping levees in the Terre Haute area. Vigo County Emergency Management Agency Deputy Director J.D. Kesler said late Sunday afternoon the barriers haven’t failed yet but that some evacuations will be necessary if levees fail.