CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa, June 14, 2008

Midwest Remains Battered By Storms, Floods

Cedar River Begins To Ebb In Iowa, But Other Rivers In Region Have Breached Levees

  • Play CBS Video Video Cedar Rapids In Ruin

    Massive rain storms and rising river levels have severely damaged much of the city of Cedar Rapids, Iowa. As Dean Reynolds reports, many in this region have witnessed severe losses.

  • Video Fight To Save Iowa Campus

    Students and faculty from the University of Iowa are struggling to prevent rising flood waters from destroying the college campus. Hari Sreenivasan reports from the Hawkeye State.

  • Video Flooding Only Getting Worse

    The situation is expected to get worse in drenched Cedar Rapids, Iowa, where the Cedar River crest is at its highest level in decades. Manuel Gallegus reports.

    • MidAmerican Energy workers prepare to work on a power line as water flows through a breach in a levee, Saturday, June 14, 2008, in Des Moines, Iowa.

      MidAmerican Energy workers prepare to work on a power line as water flows through a breach in a levee, Saturday, June 14, 2008, in Des Moines, Iowa.  (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

    • Kitty Lake rides on the front of a boat while surveying the floodwaters on Highway 6, June 13, 2008 in Coralville, Iowa.

      Kitty Lake rides on the front of a boat while surveying the floodwaters on Highway 6, June 13, 2008 in Coralville, Iowa.  (AP/M. Holst, Press-Citizen)

    • Flood waters from the Cedar River surround buildings in the southeastern edge of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, June 12, 2008.

      Flood waters from the Cedar River surround buildings in the southeastern edge of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, June 12, 2008.  (AP Photo/Steve Pope)

    • A woman is evacuated from Mercy Medical Center, June 13, 2008, in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Rising water from the Cedar River forced the evacuation of the downtown hospital Friday after residents of more than 3,000 homes fled for higher ground.

      A woman is evacuated from Mercy Medical Center, June 13, 2008, in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Rising water from the Cedar River forced the evacuation of the downtown hospital Friday after residents of more than 3,000 homes fled for higher ground.  (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

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  • Photo Essay Cedar Rapids Submerged

    Thousands evacuated as more than 400 city blocks are under water.

  • Interactive Floods & Droughts

    Discover the destructiveness of floods and droughts, see this year's predictions and get tips on what to do.

(CBS/ AP)  The dark, filthy water that flooded Iowa's second-largest city finally started to recede Saturday after forcing 24,000 people to flee, but those who remained were urged to cut back on showering and flushing to save the last of their unspoiled drinking water.

An estimated 9.2 square miles, or 1,300 blocks, were flooded in Cedar Rapids, fire department spokesman Dave Koch said. Early estimates put property damage at $736 million, Koch said.

But, as CBS News correspondent Dean Reynolds reports, some residents were intent on getting back to work and some semblance of a normal life. Outside office buildings in Downtown Cedar Rapids, people eager to get back to their businesses had to bring flash lights to gain entry to their buildings.

"I need contracts. I need payroll," one woman told Reynolds.

Elsewhere in the city, some residents tried to assess damage to their homes while others, like 91-year-old Julia Bennett, remained in shelters set up by the city.

"We have to help each other," Bennett told Reynolds. "We can't be isolated."

The drenching has also severely damaged the corn crop in Iowa, America's No. 1 corn state, and other parts of the Midwest at a time when corn prices are soaring and food shortages have led to violence in some poor countries. But officials said it was too soon to put a price tag on the damage.

While the Cedar River ebbed in hard-hit Cedar Rapids, a levee breach in the state capital of Des Moines flooded a neighborhood of more than 200 homes, a high school and about three dozen businesses.

More than 200 homes were evacuated in Iowa City, home of the University of Iowa, as a flood crest headed down the Iowa River. The Iowa City crest is not expected until Monday or early Tuesday.

At least three deaths in Iowa have been attributed to the storms and subsequent flooding, and 12 more have died in two recent tornadoes. The storms have prompted the governor to issue disaster proclamations for 83 of the state's 99 counties.

Elsewhere, Illinois emergency authorities said a levee along the Mississippi River in far western Illinois burst Saturday morning and voluntary evacuations were under way in Keithsburg, a town of about 700 residents.

"The levee broke in two places," said Keithsburg Alderman George Askew, 76. "We're getting under water."

Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama toured Quincy, Illinois, and helped fill sandbags Saturday.

"Since I've been involved in public office we've not seen this kind of devastation," Obama said of the Midwest flooding. He vowed to push the federal and state governments to provide needed aid to the stricken areas.

Parts of southern Wisconsin have been dealing with flooding for days, and President George W. Bush declared disasters in five counties there Saturday. West of Milwaukee in Summit, authorities on Saturday found a man's body near his vehicle on a flooded road, but it was unclear whether the death was flood-related.

Iowa's worst damage so far was in Cedar Rapids, a city of more than 120,000. The Cedar River crested there Friday night at nearly 32 feet, 12 feet higher than the old record set in 1929. City Engineer Dave Elgin said the Cedar River was dropping at a rate of about 2 inches an hour Saturday.

Murky, petroleum- and garbage-choked water inundated three collection wells and threatened the fourth before several hundred volunteers staged a last-ditch sandbagging operation.

Water lapped to within 3 feet of the improvised, 4-foot-high wall surrounding the brick pumping station before it began to recede. Two portable generators, one as big as a semitrailer, roared around the clock to keep the three pumps inside running.

"It's the little engine that could," said Ron Holtzman, one of several people who came to watch the operation Saturday from a nearby foot bridge.

Residents not forced to leave their homes took the warnings to conserve seriously.

Kathy Wickham, 65, was collecting water from the dehumidifier in her basement and has been bathing from the enamel washbasin she used as a child on the farm.

"I grew up without any running water, so I'm going back to my childhood," she said.

About 100 miles to the west in Des Moines, a levee ruptured early Saturday and the Des Moines River poured into the Birdland neighborhood near downtown. A mandatory evacuation was ordered for 270 homes; many of those residents had left after a voluntary evacuation request Friday.

Des Moines city crews and National Guard units started to build a temporary berm in a bid to stop the water, but by midmorning the water had cut through mounds of dirt and sandbags and inundated the homes.

Authorities knew the aging levee near Birdland, a working-class, racially diverse neighborhood, was the weakest link among the city's levees. A 2003 Corps report called for nearly $10 million in improvements across Des Moines, but there was not enough federal money to do all the work.

"This was the first to fail, and we felt it was the one likely to fail," said Bill Stowe, the city's public works director.

Some residents were upset that other areas of city have received more flood-control improvements than Birdland since massive floods hit the area in 1993.

Just south of Cedar Rapids in Iowa City, the Iowa River is expected to crest at 33 feet to 34 feet late Monday or early Tuesday, far above the 25-foot flood stage.

At the University of Iowa, students, faculty, townspeople and National Guard units filled thousands of sandbags in the area known as the Arts Campus.

"We've pretty much just abandoned any effort to try and protect the Arts Campus because we are just overwhelmed by the amount of water," university spokesman Steve Parrott said. "It's just too unsafe."

Valuable paintings have been removed from the art museum, Parrott said.

Elsewhere at the university, reports CBS News correspondent Hari Sreenivasan, the sandbagging effort has brought students and alumni together to help as best they can.

"You know what this is," asked Jane Meyer, an athletic coordinator at the university. "The hawkeye spirit, people volunteering to help the university that they love."

Iowa has had a wet spring and at least 8 inches of rain since June 6. More thunderstorms are possible in the Cedar Rapids area during the weekend, but next week is expected to be sunny and dry.


© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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by sueann702 June 15, 2008 7:42 PM EDT
Our President is exactly where he''s suppose to during this emergency....Europe. Did he pull a Katrina 2?
Reply to this comment
by grammawhamma June 15, 2008 7:14 PM EDT
Obama did his part. He put four shovels of sand in a sand bag. What more do you want!?!

Hopefully the rains will stop and the levees will hold. My thoughts are with those affected by the floods.
Reply to this comment
by downsteamjim June 15, 2008 5:58 PM EDT
To gheemaster38: You have challenged Obama. Therefore you a racist.
Reply to this comment
by downsteamjim June 15, 2008 5:57 PM EDT
To Ubrew12: ''This is related to global warming.'' Yeah it''s a third cousin twice removed on the mother-in-laws side. Last week, that old deveil global warming kept Big Brown from winning the Triple Crown.
I hope Iowa gets a few weeks of dry weather.
Reply to this comment
by gheemaster38 June 15, 2008 5:54 PM EDT
"Since I''ve been involved in public office we''ve not seen this kind of devastation," Obama said of the Midwest flooding.

***? Wasn''t he in public office doing Katrina? What about the fires in California and Florida? The Tornadoes just 2 years ago that tore threw the midwest? He seems to be suffering from some form of memory loss. OR maybe just another bait and switch tacke like being, "All things to All people."
Reply to this comment
by ubrew12 June 15, 2008 4:50 PM EDT
This is related to Global Warming.
They should probably move cuz its just going to get worse. Likewise, New Orleans.
Reply to this comment
by creeper00 June 15, 2008 4:28 PM EDT
Posted by patdickey43 at 11:14 AM : Jun 15, 2008
Patrick,
If they don''t want to come and stay with you, they''re welcome here. They can help move everything in our basement up out of the water.

How enlightening to know that I''ve brought this upon myself by my evil ways. Thank you, wingnuts.
Reply to this comment
by AlwaysSmiling June 15, 2008 2:14 PM EDT
Nancy and the others (from other articles) who are condemning the people in this flood.... You have an open invitation to come and spend a week with me...

Of course, you''ll have to park on 3rd Street, as the Highway is currently under about 4 feet of water, and the street that I''m on is next.

Until you''ve LIVED through this, don''t judge people who are going through it right now. Since a lot of you love to quote the Bible, I believe it was Jesus who said "Let he who hath NO sin cast the first stone." So, if we dig deep into your lives, will we find that sin?

I just love hypocrites. They amaze me. Especially when if this happens in their hometowns, they''ll be the ones crying the loudest on CBS and other news channels.

Have a wonderful weekend:-)
Patrick. (Muscatine, Iowa)
Reply to this comment
by gisdude June 15, 2008 1:27 AM EDT
www.freeflood.com is a good place to go to find out if your home is in a flood zone.
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