Monday, March 24, 2008

Nu ook Arkansas getroffen door grote overstromingen ( bron Cnn)

Forecast calls for more floods as rivers rageStory Highlights
Weather service issues flash flood watch in Arkansas despite no sign of rain

Arkansas suffers estimated $2M in damage; 35 counties declared disaster areas

Mississippi River well above flood stage in parts of Arkansas, Illinois

It could be midweek before rivers recede -- "they're still rising," official says

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LITTLE ROCK, Arkansas (AP) -- Forecasters warned that communities in the Arkansas prairie along the White River could suffer their worst flooding in more than a quarter-century under clear skies and sunshine.


Wade Monnig and his sister Mandy survey the debris left in his yard Sunday after flooding in Pacific, Missouri.

1 of 2 "You may be wondering why we issued a flash flood watch in eastern Arkansas when there is little to no rain in the forecast," John Robinson of the National Weather Service in North Little Rock wrote Sunday in an e-mail to reporters.

"There will be water going into areas where people have not seen it before, and may not be expecting to see high water," Robinson wrote.

Upstream, the Black River sliced through a 60-year-old levee before emergency workers and volunteers could stem the tide with a mountain of sandbags Saturday. The Black enters the White River near Newport in northeast Arkansas.

Forecasters issued a flash flood warning through Monday morning for communities along the White River.

The Arkansas Department of Emergency Management said water broke through two spots of the Black River levee. Spokeswoman Renee Preslar said the break was fueled by water pouring in from soaked southeastern Missouri, flooding outlying areas to the south of Pocahontas. Watch how flooding shut down the only road out of one Arkansas town »

Arkansas emergency management officials have said early estimates for statewide damage to homes, businesses and infrastructure was at $2 million, though that figure was expected to grow.

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Forecasts show it likely will be the middle of this week before rivers statewide see significant drops.

Arkansas Gov. Mike Beebe has declared 35 counties disaster areas.

Last week's torrential rainstorms also caused flooding in parts of Ohio and southern Illinois and in wide areas of Missouri.

At least 17 deaths have been linked to flooding, wet roads and other weather effects over the past week, and one person is missing in Arkansas. Thousands of Missouri residents have fled to Red Cross shelters or to the homes of friends or relatives.

The Mississippi River at Cape Girardeau was 40.9 feet Sunday, 9 feet above flood stage, and was expected to crest at 41.5 feet Monday morning.

Towns south of where the Mississippi and Ohio rivers meet in Cairo, Illinois, braced for flooding expected in the next couple of days.

"They're not going down yet," said John Campbell, operations chief at Missouri's State Emergency Management Agency. "They're still rising."


The Mississippi at Cairo, Illinois, was expected to crest at 54 feet Tuesday morning, 14 feet above flood stage.

Moderate flooding was forecast for New Madrid, where the river was expected to crest at 42 feet Wednesday evening. The river will crest at 41 feet in Caruthersville Friday morning, the National Weather Service said.