Wednesday, May 09, 2007

overstromingen Kansas VS nemen extreme vormen aan.

'Top three' flood brings river into towns
POSTED: 4:00 p.m. EDT, May 9, 2007
Story Highlights• 300 to 400 residents evacuated in Levacy, Missouri
• 20 levees topped along Missouri River, streams
• National Weather Service says flood one of worst ever
• Parts of Midwest got up to 8 inches of rain in 24 hours

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KANSAS CITY, Missouri (AP) -- Floodwater topped at least 20 levees protecting low-lying communities along the Missouri River and other nearby streams, authorities said Wednesday.

Stretches of highway have been closed and thousands of people have been evacuated because of flooding caused by the huge weekend storm system that also devastated Greensburg, Kansas, with a deadly tornado.

"It's a major flood," said National Weather Service meteorologist Suzanne Fortin. "It won't be a record breaker, but it will be in the top three." (Watch river spread out over farmland )

Missouri Highway Patrol troopers were working 24-hour shifts near Big Lake, a village of about 150 permanent residents, which was inundated after nine levee breaks, said Lt. John Hotz.

Two levees were topped by high water during the night, authorities said. In Levacy, water from the Missouri River had started to encroach on the town and 300 to 400 residents were evacuated Wednesday, Fortin said. (Watch how floodwaters have turned many Midwesterners into evacuees )

Big Lake, two miles from the Missouri River and about 95 miles northwest of Kansas City, was inundated Tuesday.

"The town is a loss. At this time, we don't know, but it looks like that's what's going to happen," Mark Sitherwood, presiding commissioner of Holt County, said Tuesday.

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.

Two-thirds of the town of Mosby, Missouri, 20 miles northeast of Kansas City, was under 2 to 4 feet of water Tuesday from the overflowing Fishing River, said D.C. Rogers, Clay County director of emergency services.

Missouri's state capital, Jefferson City, was preparing for flooding. After floods in 1993 and 1995, the city raised the elevation of its riverside sewage treatment plant, and the federal government bought out scores of homes on the north bank of the river, but the airport and businesses are still vulnerable. (Watch how this flood differs from 1993 disaster )

Parts of Missouri, Iowa and Kansas received as much as 8 inches of rain in a 24-hour period during the weekend thunderstorms, the weather service said.

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.

High water had begun to recede Wednesday