More Severe Weather Forecast for Midwest*
Sunday September 24, 2006 7:46 PM
By WILL GRAVES
Associated Press Writer
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - More stormy weather was forecast Sunday after two
days of high winds, heavy rain and tornadoes that were blamed for at
least nine deaths in the Midwest and the South.
Flood warnings were in effect for parts of Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky,
Missouri and Tennessee, and severe weather was possible along the
Eastern Seaboard, forecasters said.
Storms on Friday and Saturday stranded people in cars, forces others
from their homes and left thousands without power.
The death toll in Kentucky reached eight, including a father and his
1-year-old daughter in a truck that skidded in floodwaters. In Arkansas,
a woman whose boat was struck by lightning died and authorities were
searching for two missing people.
Authorities urged people to stay off the roads. ``We have a lot of
people driving past the high water signs and they are getting stuck,''
said Kentucky State Police dispatcher John Reynolds.
The National Weather Service reported that areas of Kentucky received at
least 5 inches of rain, with isolated regions getting close to 10
inches. Over 24 hours, parts of northeast Arkansas and southeast
Missouri received more than 10 inches of rain, the weather service reported.
Flooding forced more than 100 people to flee an apartment complex for
shelter at a nearby high school, officials said. Portions of Interstate
64 just east of Louisville were closed in both directions due to
standing water. Meanwhile, the storms left thousands of Kentuckians
without power.
The rain dampened a music and arts festival in central Kentucky as
waters rose to at least 6 feet in some areas, forcing the evacuation of
about 200 people at the farmstead just north of Harrodsburg in Mercer
County.
The American Red Cross and six county emergency agencies used boats and
school buses to transport attendees at the Terrapin Hill Harvest
Festival to a shelter at Lion's Park in Harrodsburg, said Ruthann
Phillips of the Red Cross.
``It was almost Katrina-like pretty much,'' said Chester Craig, a
lieutenant with the Mercer Central Volunteer Fire Department. ``There
were vehicles underwater and people were walking around in a daze.''
Elsewhere, a tornado touched down Saturday night in Kent County in
western Michigan, peeling off the roof of a barn, overturning vehicles
and damaging businesses, according to the weather service. No injuries
were reported.
In central and eastern Missouri, hundreds were without homes or power a
day after a storm churned up about 10 tornadoes and drenched some parts
of the state with as much as a foot of rain. Nearly 400 structures were
damaged or destroyed and at least 10 people were injured, said Susie
Stonner, a state emergency management spokeswoman.
In Arkansas, four northern counties declared emergencies Saturday after
severe flooding. Emily Taylor, a state emergency management spokeswoman,
said a tornado touched down five miles outside Ash Flat, damaging 12
homes and destroying two others. Two people were taken to a hospital for
minor injuries.
In northwest Tennessee, about 300 people returned home Saturday after
they were evacuated Friday night from a trailer park in Obion County
when water from a nearby creek began to overflow, said Jeremy Heidt, a
spokesman for the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency. No tornado
touchdowns, major damage or injuries were reported, he said.
In Evansville, Ind., Vanderburgh County emergency management director
Sherman Greer said his agency had given away about 550 sandbags in 90
minutes Saturday, many of them to residents of Evansville's southeast
side who were dealing with flooding for the second time in two weeks.
``These people are going through round two right now,'' Greer said.
``Just about the time they got their carpet dried out ... they're going
through it again.''
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Associated Press writers Bruce Schreiner in Louisville, Jill Zeman in
Little Rock, Ark., and Heather Hollingsworth in Kansas City, Mo.,
contributed to this report.