Flooding Mississippi River poses dire threats

MEMPHIS, Tenn., (Reuters) – The swollen Mississippi  River swallowed up farmland and threatened river towns yesterday, as record amounts of water tested a network of levees  and reservoirs built since deadly floods in the last century.

Police in Memphis, Tennessee, distributed evacuation  warnings to nearly 3,000 homes, apartment complexes and  businesses that could be in the path of the flood waters seen  peaking on Monday.

Water lapped onto Beale Street, site of the city’s renowned  music scene, and threatened homes on Mud Island, a community of  about 5,000 residents with a theme park.

The advancing crest on the Mississippi River could approach  or break records set in 1927 and 1937. The river swelled to 80  miles (130 km) wide during the 1927 flood blamed for up to  1,000 deaths and forcing 600,000 people from their homes.

The latest round of flooding in what has been an extremely  wet spring after a snowy winter in parts of the U.S. Midwest  will force the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to make more  difficult decisions like it did earlier this week.

The Army Corps blew up a levee that relieved pressure on  towns upstream but inundated dozens of Missouri farms and tens  of thousands of fertile acres (hectares).
“These are very tough decisions to make. No matter which  way you go, somebody is not being saved,” said Northwestern  University engineer and infrastructure expert Charles Dowding.

Since the 1927 calamity, billions of dollars have been  spent raising levees and adding floodways and reservoirs to  absorb flooding, but the system has never been tested like this  before, officials said.

Tributaries all along the Mississippi River were backing  up, forcing people out of their homes.

There were mandatory evacuations for three towns in  Arkansas after the White River, a Mississippi tributary,  eclipsed a 1949 record crest and overtopped a levee.
Oil refineries near the Mississippi River in Louisiana and  Tennessee were safely beyond the flood waters, companies said.

But barge operators who ferry coal and grain on the bulging  waterway were stalled as the U.S. Coast Guard closed a  five-mile (eight-km) stretch in southern Missouri.

“It’s going to be very difficult. We’ve got barges in St.  Louis that need to go south and barges in New Orleans that need  to go north,” said Larry Daily of Alter Barge Lines Inc.

“At one point in time, people living along major American  rivers that flood frequently had a disaster subculture. But  over the years that may have eroded,” said Dennis Mileti of the  Natural Hazard Center at the University of Colorado.

Two spillways North of New Orleans will be opened next week  to divert some of the flow to Lake Pontchartrain and into the  Atchafalaya basin. Louisiana plans to begin evacuating inmates  from the state prison at Angola and Governor Bobby Jindal  warned residents to be vigilant. “If you know your area was flooded in 1973, it’s not too  soon to think about … what supplies you might need if you  have to leave for an extended period of time,” Jindal said.

In Memphis, the river was projected to crest on Wednesday  at 48 feet (14.6 metres), just short of the 1937 record of 48.7  feet (14.8 metres). The Weather Service forecast record crests  downstream in Mississippi at Vicksburg on May 20 and Natchez  two days later.

“Once we do hit crest, we certainly expect to be near there  for a fair amount of time,” said Jim Belles, meteorologist in  charge at the National Weather Service in Memphis.