February 11, 2009 4:54 PM

Flood Fears Rise As Rain Pounds Midwest

(CBS/AP)  Heavy rain from an already-deadly storm system sent the Missouri River and other Midwest waterways over their banks Tuesday, forcing thousands of people to evacuate and bringing warnings that the region could see flooding close to the devastation of 1993.

Missouri Gov. Matt Blunt declared a state of emergency and mobilized National Guard troops to help. At least 19 Kansas counties declared local disaster emergencies.

River towns across much of Missouri were evacuating low-lying areas Tuesday or seeking help filling and stacking sandbags.

"We're scrambling around here," said Steve Mellis, who was volunteering near the central Missouri town of Easley as residents moved boats and equipment to higher ground.

Meteorologists now use powerful new flood prediction tools that combine rainfall data from Doppler radar and satellite with water levels from river gauges, reports CBS News correspondent Nancy Cordes.

One town meteorologists are most concerned about right now is Sibley, Mo., nestled in a bend of the Missouri river. The model predicts the river there will crest at 11 feet above flood stage on Wednesday and will remain above flood stage until at least Sunday, Cordes reports.

Two-thirds of the town of Mosby, 20 miles northeast of Kansas City, was already under two to four feet of water from the overflowing Fishing River, said D.C. Rogers, Clay County director of emergency services. He said the town's 242 residents began evacuating Monday morning. By evening, only one route into the community remained open.

Mosby's flooding could have been worse. Rogers said authorities managed to plug a damaged dam with sandbags. That private earthen dam holds back a 20-acre lake. If the dam broke, its water would flow into Clear Creek, which runs into the Fishing River and through Mosby.

"Last word I got is it's holding," Rogers said. "Hopefully, the waters will recede, and that guy can fix his dam."

"It hasn't gotten this much water since 1993," he said.

As residents of Parkville, Mo., braced for the storms, there remained a glimmer of hope: the water level is 10 feet lower than it was in 1993, reported Sophia Wharton of CBS affiliate KCTV.

Evacuations were voluntary in several western Missouri counties, but a mandatory evacuation was imposed in Parkville, just across the Missouri River from Kansas City, said Jessica Robinson, a spokeswoman for the governor.

Communities across the central Plains faced flooding from the weekend-long thunderstorms that spawned the deadly tornado that wiped out Greensburg, Kan.

Parts of Missouri, Iowa and Kansas received four to eight inches of rain in a 24-hour period, the National Weather Service said. In some areas, Tuesday morning was the first time in several days that rain wasn't falling, but runoff was still raising streams and rivers.

Flooding in Oklahoma was blamed for the drowning death of a man whose car was swept off a county road. A Kansas man died when his vehicle overturned in a water-filled ditch near Wichita, Butler County officials said.

Nearly 1,600 people were urged to evacuate the southwest Iowa town of Red Oak on Monday as the Nishnabotna River rose out of its banks.

Levees broke near Willow Creek in the western Iowa town of Missouri Valley, and some residents had to be evacuated by boat Monday, said Mayor Randy McHugh. "Appliances are just floating around," he said Monday.

Authorities rescued about 500 people Monday from flooding around Topeka, Kan., said Dave Bevans, a spokesman for Shawnee County emergency operations. Officials reported similar evacuations in Saline County, about 100 miles to the west, and flooding forced the evacuation of New Cambria, a town of about 150 people northeast of Salina.

Since the 1993 floods in the Mississippi and Missouri river basins, only two or three other flooding episodes have been comparable to what forecasters are predicting in the next several days, weather service meteorologist Andy Bailey said.

There will be differences though. The 1993 flood, one of the most costly and devastating in U.S. history, was caused by melting snow combined with heavy rain over a two-month period. After that, state buyouts of property on flood plains left fewer residences in danger of future floods.

"But make no mistake," Bailey added, "this is a major flood."

At the western Missouri town of Agency, the Platte River was forecast to reach 15 feet above flood stage Tuesday — less than a foot below its crest in 1993.

"At that stage, we expect the entire town of Agency to be flooded," Bailey said.

Elsewhere, flooding downpours from slow-moving thunderstorms will continue to swamp Western Texas, Oklahoma and even parts of New Mexico Tuesday and Wednesday, reports CBS News meteorologist George Cullen. At least another one to three inches of rain will fall, but many places could get four to six inches on top of the record rains that fell Monday.

© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment
by nebmuse May 9, 2007 12:48 PM EDT
I am in the middle of these floods. We have lost everything. WE DID EVACUATE ON SUNDAY!!! I want to also point out that, yes this is a flood zone but it only flood about every 10 years or so! This was so fast, and we have no were else to go, but we did leave!!!! Thank you to those who are sending caring thoughts.
Reply to this comment
by randalds May 9, 2007 3:49 AM EDT
AGREED
every little weather incident now is blamed on global warming. From the bee's issue to the tornados in kansas(which is btw in the tornado belt)
Posted by itwasntme000 at 01:50 PM : May 08, 2007

I have no idea if the problem with the bees is caused by global warming or not, but in the grand scheme of things it is one issue we need to address and address now. Without bees nearly all of the fruit and soft vegetable crops will fail. Along with the there will be massive losses of alfalfa and other animal feeds. The disruption in the food chain could lead to world wide famine. This is one story that needs a whole lot more work to alert people.
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by middleman8 May 8, 2007 11:18 PM EDT
YOU HAVE ANGERED MOTHER NATURE, AND ALL THE GODS, INCLUDING SUDAMS KEEPER.
Reply to this comment
by randalds May 8, 2007 7:43 PM EDT
Gosh, it sure would be nice if all of the needed National Guard troops were here to help in these natural disasters, but I guess that that's too much to ask for huh?
Reply to this comment
by itwasntme000 May 8, 2007 6:17 PM EDT
yea definately hawk
Reply to this comment
by itwasntme000 May 8, 2007 4:50 PM EDT
hawksprings
AGREED
every little weather incident now is blamed on global warming. From the bee's issue to the tornados in kansas(which is btw in the tornado belt)
Reply to this comment
by hawksprings May 8, 2007 2:11 PM EDT

I just want to remind everyone that after one of the coldest Aprils on record, and now with excessive rain in the Midwest, there has been no mention in the news about Global Warming being questioned because, we're told, that 'isolated weather incidences' cannot prove or disprove the 'fact' of Global Warming.

But you wait until the first summer heat wave hits (like they do EVERY summer) and all we'll hear about is how it's more proof of human-caused Global Warming.

Mark my words.
Reply to this comment
by f_hilbourn May 8, 2007 2:04 PM EDT
I feel so bad for all the people who have lost everything that they had. It just seems like a lot of bad weather is becoming more common over the last couple of years.
Reply to this comment
by myrdinn-2009 May 8, 2007 12:34 PM EDT
***. I hate sandbagging. Had enough of that in '93 and '94; looks like it is time to get out the shovels again.
:-(
We just barely had some forests finally coming back, full force since the '93 stuff, and a good portion of all the historical churches are still below the flood line.
Reply to this comment
by itwasntme000 May 8, 2007 12:08 PM EDT
I wonder how many will actually evacuate... I smell another katrina'esque incident. With some geneouses staying their to weather the storm.
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