Sandbaggers Busy As Missouri Rivers Rise

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Pastor Dale Morgan

unread,
May 11, 2007, 12:11:02 AM5/11/07
to Bible-Pro...@googlegroups.com
*Perilous Times and Global Warming

Sandbaggers Busy As Missouri Rivers Rise *

May 10 11:35 AM US/Eastern
By HEATHER HOLLINGSWORTH
Associated Press Writer

BIG LAKE, Mo. (AP) - Inmates joined the National Guard in sandbagging
efforts Thursday as floodwater crept toward homes and businesses across
northwest and central Missouri.

Big Lake and some other small communities were already submerged. At
Craig, inmates and National Guard members helped move sandbags to
protect the water treatment plant, schools and an ethanol plant from the
rising floodwater.

The water got within "a hillbilly's whisker from going over in several
places," Holt County Sheriff Kirby Felumb said Thursday.

State officials said dozens of levees have been topped or breached since
a weekend of drenching thunderstorms raised rivers and generated
tornadoes that claimed 12 lives in Kansas.

The rain-swollen rivers and streams that make up the Missouri River
system are cresting at different times as the water makes its way
westward toward St. Louis, where the Missouri River meets the
Mississippi, said Suzanne Fortin, a meteorologist with the National
Weather Service.

Parts of the Missouri, Platte and Grand rivers, along with their
tributaries, will likely be at flood stage or higher until at least the
weekend, adding to the misery for property owners and sending downstream
residents scurrying to fill sandbags to protect their homes.

The biggest problems are on the Platte and Grand rivers, where
floodwaters were still rising to near-historic levels, causing some road
closures.

"It's going to get worse before it gets any better," said Julie
Adolphson, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Pleasant
Hill.

Most of the compromised levees shield agricultural land, but at least
nine major, nonfederal levees that protect towns had been overrun, said
Susie Stonner, a spokeswoman for the State Emergency Management Agency.
No injuries or deaths had been reported, Stonner said.

The village of Big Lake was flooded Monday night and Tuesday after five
levees on the nearby Missouri River and four smaller levees along the
Tarkio River and Tarkio Creek were breached.

Matt Anderson, a volunteer firefighter at Big Lake, helped with an
evacuation and recalled watching the rush of water hit the community
early Tuesday morning and carry off large trees and even docks with the
boats still attached.

"It just all of the sudden starting rolling in," Anderson said. "I don't
know how fast it was coming, but it was coming too fast to stay around."

But even as floodwater crested at lower-than-predicted levels in many
spots along Missouri rivers and streams, nervous residents cleared
valuables from their homes.

Many had lived through the 1993 floods, one of the most costly in U.S.
history.

"It just makes you nervous when you've been through that," said Saline
County Sheriff Wally George, who remembers how the floodwater then
mangle a stretch of railroad tracks. I'll never forget that sight. A set
of straight railroad tracks it made into a 'U'. I'm amazed water can do
that."

Rooftops were all that were showing of some of the 450 to 475 homes
flooded in the town of Big Lake, said Charlie Triggs, chief of the
volunteer fire department. The Missouri Water Patrol rescued about 20
people from a campsite and flooded homes in the area.

In Bigelow, Bill Hayworth watched as floodwaters rose around his home
and the homes of his daughter and other relatives on Wednesday.

The 77-year-old lost his own home in nearby Big Lake in 1993 when a
record-setting flood completely covered his house. He had flood
insurance then, but bought no such insurance for his current home
because Bigelow had no history of flooding.

"I am hoping FEMA will help us," he said, staring at the water that
covered rows of planted tomatoes and sweet corn that he sells at flea
markets. "I don't know what God had in mind for us on this—'93 and then
this one. Maybe it's time to get on a mountaintop."

Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages