September 23, 2009 10:03 AM

Floods Leave Trail of Victims in Southeast

By
CBSNews
(CBS/ AP)  As floodwaters around Atlanta began to recede, residents were packing moving vans with furniture and commiserating about water-logged apartments.

"I'm toast," Penny Freeman, who moved into a first-floor apartment five days ago, said Tuesday. "I don't have a place to stay. I'm losing my mind right now."

Hundreds of millions of dollars in damage is estimated and many affected residents don't have flood insurance, reports CBS Early Show weather anchor Dave Price.

At least nine deaths in Georgia and Alabama were blamed on the torrential downpours in the Southeast. The storms finally relented and relief was in sight with just a slight chance of rain overnight, but the onslaught left many parts of the region in stagnant water.

Washed-out roads and flooded freeways around metro Atlanta caused commuters headaches, though many major arteries had reopened by Tuesday night. Gov. Sonny Perdue asked President Barack Obama to declare a state of emergency in Georgia. Officials estimated $250 million in damage in the state.

Many neighborhoods remained awash in several feet of murky, brown water, even as an emerging sun shed light on the widespread flood damage. Robert Blake, with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said people should assume floodwater is contaminated and should be cautious when they return to their homes.

Most deaths were from drowning when cars were swept off roadways. Authorities released a 15-minute 911 call of a storm victim's last moments. Seydi Burciaga, 39, screamed to a dispatcher as water rose to her neck. The dispatcher advised her to try to break a window, but she couldn't.

"I don't want to drown here, please!" Burciaga said.

Rescue crews tried to swim into the water to find her, but the floodwaters were moving too fast and they couldn't spot her, Price reports.

Eddie Stroup, an investigator with the Chattooga County Sheriff's Office, told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution that 14-year-old Nicholas Osley drowned when he and a friend saw a Jeep in the water and drove it to see if they could help if people were stranded. The current from the nearby Chattooga River swept them away, Stroup said. The friend survived.

After several days of steady rain, the ground was saturated from Alabama through Georgia into eastern Tennessee and western North Carolina. The floods came just months after an epic two-year drought in the region ended with winter rains.

In Tennessee, a man was still missing after jumping into the fast-moving water as part of a bet. Boats and trucks evacuated 120 residents from a retirement center as nearby creeks rose, and several hundred others were ferried from low-lying neighborhoods and motels to dry land.

The devastation surrounding Atlanta was widespread. In Austell, about 17 miles west of downtown Atlanta, Sweetwater Creek overflowed its banks, sending muddy water rushing into a nearby mobile home park where several trailers were almost completely submerged.

"We don't know what to do," said Jenny Roque, 30, who lived there with her husband and four children. "The only thing we have left is our truck."

Just down the road, in the Mulberry Creek subdivision, large houses built just five years ago were partially underwater. Some residents tried to salvage anything.

"There's things that you can't replace, but it's just stuff," said Deborah Golden, whose split-level home was mostly underwater. "But there are four people in our family and we're all safe so we're glad for that."

At one of the largest shelters at the Cobb County Civic Center, Shirley Jones sat with others on green cots, chatting about the fate of their homes. Around them, children played games.

"When I saw the water rising, it brought back bad memories," said Jones, who lived in New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina. The 72-year-old had moved to the area two months ago.

Jones said rescue efforts this time went much more smoothly. A boat retrieved her from a family member's house.

Before being evacuated, Cordell Albert and her husband Christopher moved their valuables to the second floor of their Powder Springs home. The couple waded through knee-deep water before a raft picked them up.

"I feel lost," she said. "I feel homeless."

CBS/ AP
Add a Comment See all 17 Comments
by mimi5952 January 25, 2010 7:54 PM EST
My prayers are with these folks. It must be awful to have you home flooded. God bless them.
Reply to this comment
by thedoll50 September 23, 2009 7:27 PM EDT
FEMA better get over there and help these people. They are as bad off, or worse, as the "Katrina" people. Of course the government is still to busy bailing out New Orleans. It is time to move on from those people, "Katrina", and start helping others. The people in Georgia and Alabama need the governments help. Get their now.
Reply to this comment
by obi96 September 23, 2009 5:45 PM EDT
Is this a sweeps week or something? I could not believe the depths of poor taste I witnessed this morning listening to that poor woman's last minutes alive. What would possess you to air that? That was over the top on so many levels. "but it's news" listen, I think all but the most twisted minds could have lived without hearing a minute by minute account of some poor souls untimely death.
The news used to be able to convey the effect of the devastation with out it being comparable to a Quinton Tarentino movie.
Reply to this comment
by stuart-johns September 23, 2009 5:44 PM EDT
by jameslouiky September 23, 2009 3:26 PM EDT
SkirtLifter -

Yes there ought to be some law or something to stop self help.
======================

Yes. Were you self-educated too? Because there should be a law against that....obviously.
Reply to this comment
by observer2020 September 23, 2009 12:07 PM EDT
The police/911 operators should have never, ever released this recording. Hearing the woman's last words is horrible for her family, not to mention all of us with hearts. And can you imagine how the 911 operator feels knowing that woman died? There really is NO decency left in the media today and this is just more proof. CBS wasn't the only people that played this--it is media-wide--all channels and all over the web. My heart and prayers go out to the family and to all the victims of the flood.
Reply to this comment
by rhoda_penmark September 23, 2009 1:06 PM EDT
However, CBS DID air it, that's where I saw it. It matters nil to me that it was media-wide. CBS did nothing to rise above the other psudo journalistic rabble. If ABC, NBC and the others all jumped off a bridge,....well, never mind, I'll just leave it at "that would just be a good start" and CBS could surely follow.
by SkirtLifter September 23, 2009 12:04 PM EDT
salmoc44,

So it's OK for republican majority states to pay federal taxes, and receive no benefits from these payments? And what about your dem brethren living in these states, do you want them left to the wolves, without aid, victims of repub tyranny?

Conservative principles don't mean zero compassion or social programs, conservative principles mean a little less gov't and a bit more individual freedom.

You don't really want the gov't to abandon Georgians, do you? They need help equal to what Katrina victims got. It's only fair.
Reply to this comment
by chimom321 September 23, 2009 10:55 AM EDT
ABSOLUTELY DISGUSTING CBS! The airing of the 911 audio Seydi Burciaga drowning is in NO way news. I guess there is no small bit of decency left in the media today, at least not for CBS News!
Reply to this comment
by SkirtLifter September 23, 2009 10:26 AM EDT
OK
If it's true that CBS played the 911 calls of the dying, They owe a sincere apology. And a change in policy. Maybe somenoe should be held accountable for this insensitive buffoonery.

NOW
I'll apologize, IN ADVANCE, for what I am about to say...

1. Floods in Georgia
2. Fires in California
3. Dust Storms in Australia
4. Swine Flu Plague
5. North Pole Ice Cap Melted
6. Barrack Hussein Obama as President

7. ?

Need one more sign and it's OVER. Armageddon, Rapture, woo HOO! Sounds like a hoot.
Reply to this comment
by willow013 September 23, 2009 5:20 PM EDT
7. We now have Dog Flu.... It's called H3N8....
by retiredgustav September 23, 2009 5:48 PM EDT
# 1-2-3-5 are all caused by global warming, #4 is a serious type flu that happens every few year. President Obama has nothing to do with it.
by nancyraelash September 23, 2009 9:19 AM EDT
And we wonder what happened to the care of concern of others in this country? WHY would you even CONSIDER airing this 911 call?? How can you possibly be SOOO rude, uncaring and insensitive????
I do not usually watch CBS news and now I know why!!!
Reply to this comment
by formrusmcsgt September 23, 2009 9:08 AM EDT
Most deaths were from drowning when cars were swept off roadways.
---
What is up with these people? They think they're driving boats instead of cars?

Wherever they wanted to go, it surely wasn't worth losing their lives over.

Just plain stupid....
Reply to this comment
by ellenblue September 23, 2009 10:49 AM EDT
They are called,"flash floods" because they usually happen suddenly, without any warning. Hopefully, you will take my word for this and never have to experience it firsthand to understand
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