February 11, 2009 2:49 PM

Floods Drench Midwest, Heat Scorches East

(CBS/AP)  Floodwater washed away three houses and threatened dams in Wisconsin on Monday as military crews joined desperate sandbagging operations to hold back Indiana streams surging toward record levels.

The East Coast simmered through temperatures climbing toward the century mark.

Ten deaths were blamed on stormy weekend weather, most in the Midwest. Wisconsin Gov. Jim Doyle declared an emergency for 29 counties and President Bush late Sunday declared a major disaster in 29 Indiana counties. Iowa Gov. Chet Culver said nearly a third of his state's 99 counties need federal help.

Rivers in several parts of the Midwest swelled with the runoff from heavy weekend rainfall, topped by the 11 inches that fell Saturday in Indiana.

Water was pouring over the top of Wisconsin's Dell Creek Dam on Lake Delton in Sauk County, and had swept away three houses, county emergency management director Jeff Jelinek said. He was not sure whether there were any injuries, but said people had been told to evacuate the area, which is about 50 miles north of Madison.

The devastation near Lake Denton is tremendous, reports CBS News' Linda Eggert. People are calling it surreal; one lady said it was like a "water slide times 1000."

A couple thousand people in Columbia County, about 30 miles north of Madison, were urged to evacuate below the Wyocena and Pardeeville dams, said Pat Beghin, a spokesman for the county's emergency management.

The Wyocena Dam's spillway had washed out, and workers were sandbagging to try to save the dam, Beghin said. The Pardeeville dam was overflowing, creating a risk for the nearly 10,000 people downstream in Portage, he said.

The Upper Spring Dam in Palmyra was failing, state emergency management officials said. But only one house in the rural area was in danger, Palmyra town chairman Stewart Calkins said.

Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources engineers were being sent across the state to survey other dams.

Wisconsin Gov. Jim Doyle had declared states of emergency for 30 counties. At least 130 inmates from the Department of Corrections were helping sandbag in nine areas, according to the state emergency management. The Red Cross had 11 shelters open across the state and was preparing a 12th, officials said.

A new storm system was headed toward the Ohio Valley from the southern Plains on Monday - Oklahoma got up to 6 inches of rain by late morning and utilities reported nearly 5,000 customers blacked out - and the National Weather Service said as much as 3 inches of rain could fall on already waterlogged Indiana late Monday.

The weather service posted a tornado warning for south-central Illinois and a severe thunderstorm warning for Indiana.

Some 200 Indiana National Guard members and 140 Marines and sailors joined local emergency agencies Monday in sandbagging a levee of the White River at Elnora, about 100 miles southwest of Indianapolis. The White River was forecast to crest Tuesday at nearby Newberry at 16 feet above flood stage.

In Columbus, Indiana, CBS News' Jay Hermacinski reports that regional hospital crews are working around the clock to pump more than six feet of water out of the hospital.

Local officials said they wanted to raise nearly a mile of levees as much as 3 feet.

By Monday morning, flooding at eight sites in central and southern Indiana had eclipsed levels set in the deluge of March 1913, which had been considered Indiana's greatest flood in modern times, said Scott Morlock, a hydrologist with the U.S. Geological Survey in Indiana.

Those sites included Newberry, where the White River reached 28.04 feet Monday morning, topping the record of 26.98 feet set in March 1913.

While the Midwest fought to cope with flooding, the East was locked in a sauna. Heat advisories were posted Monday from the Carolinas to Connecticut, with temperatures expected to hit 100 from Georgia to New York, the National Weather Service said. Raleigh-Durham, N.C., hit a record 101 on Sunday.

The heat and dry conditions fueled an Eastern North Carolina wildfire - more than 30,000 thousand acres have burned, reports CBS News correspondent Bianca Solorzano.

Humidity in the New York City area will make it feel between 100 and 105 degrees, notes CBS station WCBS-TV, adding that the high temperatures will likely last until midweek.

"It's just crazy. ... It's really, really hot," said New York City street worker Jessica Pena as she swept a midtown Manhattan street at around 8:15 a.m. The temperature already was in the upper 80s.

In the fifth inning of the Kansas City Royals-Yankees game in New York, fans cheered loudly when a cloud moved in front of the sun, then booed moments later when the sun returned.

"We came to New York and the whole week is hotter than in Florida," Patti Yost, 47, of Spring Hill, Fla., said at Yankee Stadium.

The heat also wore down tourists in Washington. "We're going to get back on the Metro and go to the hotel and get into the pool," Jeanne Ringel of Redondo Beach, Calif., said outside the Smithsonian's Freer Gallery of Art.

New York City opened 300 cooling centers Monday, said Office of Emergency Management spokesman Chris Gilbride. District of Columbia officials declared Monday and Tuesday Code Red days for poor air quality, and schools in parts of New York, Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Maryland closed early as class rooms heated up. Employees at the Ohio Department of Health got the day off because of trouble with the air conditioning in their building.

PJM, the electric power grid for 13 Mid-Atlantic and Midwestern states and the District of Columbia, issued an advisory saying it expected to meet the surging demand for power but urged customers to conserve.

The weekend death toll included six in Michigan, two in Indiana and one each in Iowa and Connecticut.

© 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 See all 48 Comments
by al2008-2009 June 10, 2008 1:13 PM EDT
To those who continue to stick your heads in the sand and deny global warming, please wake up. You cannot fight change; we will get Obama elected and you will learn to live responsibly and pay your fair share of c02 taxes.
You will learn to give mother earth the respect and honor she needs and deserves, and you will accept the progressive regulations that will finally help bring our mother back into peace and harmony and balance. As Obama has recently stated on Earth Day, we will save the planet.
We will save mother earth. We are fighting for the change mother earth needs, a change we can all believe in, and we are winning; come join us today. Click on Obama%u2019s website under people and then click enviornmentalists, get the facts, and donate as much as you can; thank you for helping us save mother earth in these, the most critical days of our mother*s history.
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by oneworldusa June 10, 2008 7:48 AM EDT
Cute little boy in the pic, but why is someone from NC hanging out at the DC zoo with the price of fuel what it is today? There are similar options within a more reasonable traveling distance for everyone.

Every American should visit DC in their lifetime. It will take 2 weeks or more so to see and do everything. But, perhaps, with fuel being what it is, maybe now is not the time.
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by mommakat64 June 10, 2008 6:41 AM EDT
Throughout my years on Earth, I''ve lived in central Missouri along the Mississippi, southern Illinois near St. Louis, in the Chicago area, south eastern Wisconsin, and now I''m in the Pacific Northwest in Vancouver, Washington, where an active volcano, Mt. St, Helens, is in everybody''s backyard. The weather that is happening in the East and the Midwest, I''ve seen over and over again. Being from the St. Louis/Alton area which is known for it''s humidity and heat--if it''s 101* during the day, it''ll be 98* at night--I always refer to my hometown area as "the sweaty armpit of the nation". And tornadoes, don''t get me started.. As for Chicago, snow and ice in the winter, hot in the summer. In the Pac North, we''re having some wacky weather, like we did in ''03, ''97, etc. One thing is sure, there''ll always be weather.
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by ubrew12 June 10, 2008 12:34 AM EDT
washrealtor said: "Global warming, droughts? Don''''t make me laugh. "
No one said they knew what kind of weather global warming would bring. They just said that if you like the weather you''ve been having... KISS IT GOODBYE.

Apparently, that message didn''t resonate with enough Americans.
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by miami_21 June 9, 2008 11:19 PM EDT
a view from behind bars; sorry for you folks in indiana....you have a very small chance or recovery with your "little dictator" gov guy.....
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by washrealtor June 9, 2008 8:57 PM EDT
Here in the Seattle area it is in the 50''s and rainy. This has been the standard almost all spring and summer. Global warming, droughts? Don''t make me laugh. If you like cold, damp weather move to the northwest but don''t tell me to pay more taxes so you can feel good.
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by kamsack50 June 9, 2008 8:48 PM EDT
al2008
You''re dreaming.
You really believe Americans are going to give up their fat lives of cars, computers and high tech? It''s not the government that''s the problem, it''s you, Fat America
And that''s just America. You think other countries, far less spoiled, that have waited ages to develop will go back to the stone ages because fat American energy guzzlers tell them to? Wake up!
This thing is going to play out and there''s not a *** thing you or anyone can do to stop it. Only thing you can do is pray for new technologies and mother nature to change her whimsical mind.
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by al2008-2009 June 9, 2008 8:12 PM EDT
I*m appalled at the administration*s lack of response to the global warming heat waves, fires, and droughts. We have no comprehensive strategy in place whatsoever, let alone a detailed plan of action to mitigate the effects of these droughts, and mother earth continues to suffer while the administration refuses to go forward and do what*s right for mother earth.
.
How long must we sit idly by while our mother continues to suffer from the warming taking place at a feverish pace? How long must our mother suffer before we have proper c02 taxes put into place? How long must the destruction of mother earth take place before we finally put responsible regulations into effect? How long must we wait until we beef up our corn ethanol production? At least Obama wants to cut c02 pollution by 80%; he is definitely our best hope. As Obama has recently stated on Earth Day, we will save the planet. We will change our economy to a green economy, eliminate our current anti-progressive economy, and eliminate c02 pollution by 80% in our generation. This is a change we all definitely need, a much needed change for the better.
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We the people call upon our leaders to implement a comprehensive antiglobal warming strategy at once and work in coordination with state and federal officials; these heatwaves and droughts continue to worsen and the quicker we stop the warming the sooner we will see these heatwaves and droughts cease. We need action now.
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by lloydbest1 June 9, 2008 8:11 PM EDT
"...What of June??? My hometown is currently running 17 degrees below seasonal norms. Now, I know that won''''t keep up and the weather forcast does, infact, promise a return to more nearly normal conditions...."
Posted by LloydBest1 at 12:10 PM : Jun 09, 2008

I''m afraid I lied. Or the weather bureau got an updated forcast. More of the same old Alaska Panhandle slop we''ve had since February. Our next chance for anything even remotely summerlike won''t come until the middle or end of next week.

Posted by lewiston14 at 12:17 PM : Jun 09, 2008

I checked some of the temperature readings in the New York area a moment or so ago and from the look of things you''ll need a keg..:)
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by irliberal June 9, 2008 7:56 PM EDT

Posted by coppertales at 04:39 PM

Eh, sooner or later karma will smack some humanity back into you. Just wait for it.
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