Receding Cedar Rapids Floods Revealing 'Incredible Destruction'

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ALLEN G. BREED and JIM SALTER | June 15, 2008 07:08 PM EST | AP

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A sign outside the Iowa Welcome Center is paritally submerged in flood water from the Mississippi River Sunday, June 15, 2008 in Burlington, Iowa. Receding water on Sunday revealed the widespread damage caused by a record flood crest, while other Iowa cities faced rivers that were still rising. Burlington is expecting a flood crest in the Mississippi River within the next couple of days. (AP Photo/Julie Jacobson)

IOWA CITY, Iowa — A week's work of frantic sandbagging by students, professors and the National Guard couldn't spare this bucolic college town from the surging Iowa River, which has swamped more than a dozen campus buildings and forced the evacuation Sunday of hundreds of nearby homes.

The swollen river, which bisects this city of about 60,000 residents, was topping out at about 31.5 feet _ a foot and a half below earlier predictions. But it still posed a lingering threat, and wasn't expected to begin receding until Monday night.

"I'm focused on what we can save," University of Iowa President Sally Mason said as she toured her stricken campus. "We'll deal with this when we get past the crisis. We're not past the crisis yet."

The university said 16 buildings had been flooded, including one designed by acclaimed architect Frank O. Gehry, and said others were at risk.

Iowa City Mayor Regenia Bailey said 500 to 600 homes were ordered to evacuate and hundreds of others were under a voluntary evacuation order through the morning. The city had no estimate of the number of homes that had actually flooded.

Bailey said homeowners will not be allowed back until the city determines it's safe.

Gov. Chet Culver said it was "a little bit of good news" that the river had crested, but cautioned that the situation was still precarious.

"Just because a river crests does not mean it's not a serious situation," he said. "You're still talking about a very, very dangerous public safety threat."

Elsewhere, state officials girded for serious flooding threats in Burlington and southeast Iowa including Fort Madison and Keokuk. Officials said 500 National Guard troops had already been sent to Burlington, a Mississippi River town of about 27,000, and some people were being evacuated.

Culver said the southeastern part of the state was likely to "see major and serious flooding on every part of the southeastern border of our state from New Boston and down."

In Cedar Rapids _ where flooding had forced the evacuation of about 24,000 people from their homes _ residents waited hours to get their first up-close look since flooding hammered most of the city earlier this week.

Some grew angry after long waits to pass through checkpoints. Cedar Rapids officials also were inspecting homes for possible electrical and structural hazards.

"It's stupid," said Vince Fiala, who said he waited for hours before police allowed him to walk five blocks to his house. "People are down on their knees and they're kicking them in the teeth."

The city's municipal water system was back to 50 percent of capacity Sunday, a big victory after three of the city's four drinking water collection wells were contaminated by murky, petroleum-laden floodwater. That contamination had left only about 15 million gallons a day for the city of more than 120,000 and the suburbs that depend on its water system.

After much of the University of Iowa's Arts Campus flooded in 1993, raised walkways were installed that doubled as berms. But those were quickly overwhelmed by the Iowa River's rising waters.

Standing beside the grayish water surrounding the limestone and stainless steel Iowa Advanced Technologies Laboratories, designed by Gehry, Mason choked up.

"I got tears in my eyes when I saw what was happening here," she said.

Across the river, Art Building West was surrounded by a lagoon of murky water. Designed by Steve Holl, it was one of only 11 buildings in the world recognized last year by the American Institute of Architects, said Rod Lehnertz, director of campus and facilities planning.

The damage would have been worse had it not been for the Herculean efforts of students, faculty, National Guard troops and others who swarmed the campus over several days to erect miles of sandbag walls, some as high as 9 feet.

On Saturday alone, volunteers filled and installed more than 100,000 sandbags, Lehnertz said.

Lehnertz was confident that buildings that hadn't flooded by Sunday were well-protected. He said the most pressing issue was flooding in the six miles of underground tunnels that feed steam to campus buildings for power. Workers pumped water from the tunnels into the streets and down toward the river.

Some buildings at the Arts Campus on the river's west bank had as much as 8 feet of water inside.

All elective and non-emergency procedures were canceled at the university hospital, and non-critical patients were discharged, Mason said. Nurses were brought in from elsewhere to ensure all emergency shifts would be covered.

Bruce Brown, 64, a retired radiology professor at University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, spent three days filling sandbags on the east bank. But picturesque brick Danforth Chapel, where his daughter was married, flooded anyway.

"When I think about moving rare books from the bottom of the library, I weep," he said. But then he joked about pulling sandbag duty with a hulking Hawkeye football player.

"I weigh 129, he weighs about 300 pounds," he said. "He would ship these thing that were like dead bodies to me. But that was fine. We worked together and got it done."

Elsewhere in the Midwest, hundreds of members of the Illinois National Guard headed to communities along the swollen Mississippi River on Sunday for sandbagging duty while emergency management officials eyed rain-swollen rivers across the state.

Two levees broke Saturday near the Mississippi River town of Keithsburg, Ill., flooding the town of 700 residents about 35 miles southwest of Moline. The National Weather Service said the Mississippi would crest Tuesday morning near Keithsburg at 25.1 feet. Flood stage in the area is 14 feet. Rising water threatening approaches also prompted Illinois officials to close a Mississippi River bridge at Quincy.

___

Associated Press writers Melanie S. Welte in Des Moines, Jim Salter in Iowa City Maria Sudekum Fisher in Columbus Junction, Iowa, Don Babwin in Chicago and Charles Babington in Quincy, Ill., contributed to this report.

 
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Good Job CR, you make me proud.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:26 PM on 06/18/2008
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If only to get the cronies out of our government, we need to oust the Republicans. There are real needs and people deserve real help from agencies like FEMA. If we continue to put corporate shilling above the welfare of our citizens, we're just plain stupid.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:47 AM on 06/16/2008

I can't figure out why there were no reports of rioting, looting, raping, and murdering as there were with Katrina.

Is it media bias?

Is there some difference that I'm missing?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:34 PM on 06/15/2008

yeah, there was an orderly evacuation in Iowa.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:42 PM on 06/15/2008
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If we shot all of "them" would that make you happy?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:04 PM on 06/15/2008

What are you implying? People were drowning in New Orleans. Instead you talk about rioting, looting and raping. Many of those stories were found to be untrue, although I am sure some of them were true. The response to Katrina was a huge failure by Bush and CO. Just don't bring Katrina into this just so that you can make some implication that white people respond more appropriately to a disaster than AA's. That is what I am assuming you meant.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:08 PM on 06/15/2008

I'll take a stab at it:

Because the police didn't have to abandon the city due to a category 5 hitting them? After 3-4 days under those conditions chaos does tend to take over. The majority of the force had to flee for their lives from the worst storm of the century to hit the gulf coast, and the overwhelming devastation it brought afterwards made more leave. It required a fast Federal level response that didn't come. Or did you miss that part of the media story?

Iowans are good people. A diverse, beautiful state. A category 5 didn't hit them but the flooding was no different, as the flooding began hitting people were well informed on what to do and where to go. They are the pride of our nation and don't deserve this tragedy to be compared to any other as a political hit job.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:48 AM on 06/16/2008
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The people of New Orleans are good people, too. If I'm not mistaken,I think that's the point of staash's post. The coverage of Katrina was very biased and slanderous of the African American community there, as this site discussed at the time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:45 AM on 06/16/2008
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The events did not occur with the same suddenness. In New Orleans, people were swept away by an ocean of water, and more than 1,000 people died. In Iowa, my beautiful home state, the immediate cause of most of the flooding was the overflow of several rivers, a slower event in a far less populated area, resulting in terrible devastation but not widespread threats to one's life.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:08 AM on 06/16/2008
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I was watching PBS yesterday when this guy said that our present infrastructute was built by past generations and our generation as not done a single thing to build or rebuild our now crumbling infrastructure. we are too busy trying to make the fortune 500 richest people on earth list to care.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:51 PM on 06/15/2008

Past generations looked to the future of their country. Recent generations look to the here and now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:20 PM on 06/15/2008

Well said.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:23 PM on 06/15/2008

You're right.
Bridges shouldn't collapse in the richest nation on Earth, steampipes shouldn't explode and blow up a whole block, and developed cities with levee systems in place (promised to maintain up to a 500 year flood event) should not be breeching.

Quote:
"The fact is we have a 100-year-old system, and that is a constraint. We may be dealing with meteorological conditions that are unprecedented " it certainly looks that way, in the last 7 months"
-Lee Sander, MTA Chairman in NY on subway flooding, 2007

http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/08/08/why-do-the-subways-flood/

Knocked the city out, one fast heavy rain dumping only 3 inches , overwhelmed the whole system.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:04 PM on 06/15/2008

Exactly! In Europe it took decades, but PUBLIC utilities, rather than paying stock dividends, salaries to board members, overpaying executives, etc., plowed money into infrastructures, such that all power lines are underground and therefore not vulnerable to weather extremes. Even on the island of Saba (Netherland Antilles), the Dutch government paid to put power lines underground to protect them from tropical storms/hurricanes. This was a tremendous expense on a volcanic rock island with less than 2,000 Dutch citizens. For Europeans, quality of life and public safety take precedence over profiteering.

Meanwhile, Duquesne Light (Pittsburgh) - a PRIVATE utility, is YEARS behind on scheduled maintenance to clear overhanging tree limbs; overloads transformers with increased power demands without upgrading system capacity; blames outages on "weather events" even when customers affected by the power outages prove via National Weather Service records that weather was idyllic as their plants went dark; hires the most expensive law firm in town to represent it. Better to pay thousands in legal fees than honor legitimate claims for several hundred dollars from working class customers. We expect frequent outages which can last for days -health hazards for the elderly and fragile to lose air conditioning/electric fans in sweltering summer weather, or heat in frigid winter weather. It keeps paying dividends and hitting captive consumers for costs by raising rates. The reason why utilities were called PUBLIC utilitieswas because health and safety of the public relied upon them. They should not be privatized.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:54 AM on 06/16/2008

I find it curious that while yet again a great American city drowns, Mr. Bush is too busy eating great German asparagus to come home and pay attention to this catastrophe AND the MSM simply isn't aware of that fact or not mentioning it AND the irony of McCain's statements re:Katrina, how he would have been more present (meanwhile celebrating his b'day w/Bush) and yet....

crickets....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:55 PM on 06/15/2008

What is a president supposed to do? Go and pull people out of buildings? Sandbag? Whats next, do you want a president who is like mommy and daddy or what... Presidents NEVER visited diaster sites, or even sent money until recently. Everytime something happens the presidents job is to protect us from future attack not screw around showing they care. You have a mom and dad to do that.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:04 PM on 06/15/2008
- TAC I'm a Fan of TAC permalink

"What is a president supposed to do?"

Fly over, look down and have your picture taken?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:40 PM on 06/15/2008

As much as I despise him, what could he do? There are systems in place for natural disasters. He is certainly not the "decider" and he certainly is not the "magical fixer" either. Honestly, there is nothing that he could do here, and all he would do is take police and the national guard away from the important things they are already doing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:54 PM on 06/16/2008

Was a time when if the President was really busy, he could send the Vice President to handle secondary crises.

[more crickets...]

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:52 PM on 06/16/2008

The slicing and dicing really need to stop. Disaster can strike anywhere, flooding in Iowa, flooding in Louisianna, fires in California, tornadoes, hurricanes, earthquake. Somewhere, some place on planet Earth a disaster is occurring. Which means there are humans somewhere, some place suffering. It serves no purpose to compare who suffers the most.

It's disappointing that our president doesn't think a state catastrophe requires his immediate attention and that he feels that staying in Paris while Iowa drowns is appropriate.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:09 PM on 06/15/2008
- Paul I'm a Fan of Paul permalink

Maybe Bush can stop off in Holland for a few days and get a tour of their flood control system.

He should see how a real country protects its cities instead of blaming people for where they live.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:49 PM on 06/15/2008

Exactly. America is on its way to third world status, if it isn't there already. This administration has served to accelerate that process exponentially. The next president must address these critical infrastructure deficiencies immediately:

Failing power grid.

Broken levee system.

Decrepit bridges and highways, unable to adequately handle even half of the current traffic volume.

Aging ports, where cargo is given short shrift, and luxury cruise ships all priority.

A rail system that, because of lack of maintenance and funding, is a laughing stock to the rest of the world.

Control of "we the people's" military by privateering mercenary corporations.

A inexcusable and disastrous shortage of hospitals in lower/middle income areas.

This is the business of government, first and foremost. The idiot neo-con hawks and their minions think that the constitution only provides for the "common defense", i.e., foreign intervention, having nothing to do with defending the U.S. or its population] but completely ignore "the general welfare" clause. And now, the citizens of this country are paying a terrible price. Remember this on election day.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:26 PM on 06/15/2008

Please, let him stay in Paris. We don't want him here!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:35 PM on 06/15/2008
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The Europeans don't want him either... it's called protocol, as well as being polite.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:47 PM on 06/15/2008
- Taan I'm a Fan of Taan permalink

Why aren't the megachurch's big kahunas lambasting all those Middle Americans caught up in endless cyclones and flooding for their godless ways as they did for the unfortunate folks in New Orleans? If sin causes hurricanes, why not twisters and floods? If the shoe fits wear it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:25 PM on 06/15/2008
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Building in a flood plain and cover it with imperious surface causes this situation

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 PM on 06/15/2008

Bush sends his prayers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:56 PM on 06/15/2008

This is the second time that Cedar Rapids has seen tremendous flooding and damage in fifteen years. They saw nearly as bad a scenario in 1993, built levees, and then this occurred. One has to wonder about the wisdom in rebuilding there, seriously.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:29 PM on 06/15/2008

Flood level in Cedar Rapids, IA is 12 feet. In 1993 the river rose to 19 feet. 20 feet is considered a "100 year flood". 26.5 feet is a "500 year flood". The odds of the river rising to 26.5 point is 0.02. The river crested Friday at 31.2 feet. In 1993 a few parks were under water and some homes had flooded basements in Cedar Rapids. No insurance statistics or engineering calculations have ever calculated the possiblity of anything of this magnitude. Please get your facts straight. We will rebuild this beautiful city.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:19 PM on 06/15/2008

"Please get your facts straight."

Maybe having a 100 yeat flood and a 500 year flood within a few years of each other means one should reconsider what the "facts" are.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:34 PM on 06/15/2008

Did you ask that same question concerning New Orleans? Which we know is below sea-level with 3 great bodies of water near-by......Be fair, did YOU ask that about New Orleans, also?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:00 PM on 06/15/2008
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I completely agree, even though the Iowa levees were apparently built properly and measured up to their intended purpose, while the New Orleans flood walls were not, and failed long before their intended limit.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:47 AM on 06/16/2008

The rush of tires on asphalt, the identifiable whine of a Dynaflow transmission, the headlights of the rare passing cars casting a glow on the ceiling as we lay in sleeping bags during our summer visits in the fifties. Mornings of "Holsom" bread toasted in the "Toastmaster", canned peaches, a glass of "Hi-C" and out to Vander Veer Park we went. Tot lot for the slides and teeter-totters, ducks squawking in the lagoon, the early cool air, the promise of uncharted discoveries on the way to Little Bit of Heaven and real hot dogs on real buns when we got home. The sound of the Rock Island "Rocket" down by the Mississippi, that was Davenport, Iowa mid-century. A more American place wasn't to be found.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:18 PM on 06/15/2008
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Grrreaat writing!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:01 PM on 06/15/2008
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The contrast between the assistance given to these residents and those of New Orleans, will be staggering. Just another sign of who is valued in this nation, and who isn't.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:00 PM on 06/15/2008
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And why no media reports on the shootings and looting and angry citizens in the streets demanding the government save them? Are these Midwest people a bunch of sheep just helping each other out and doing what they need to do?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:16 PM on 06/15/2008

why the military checkpoints there?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:58 PM on 06/15/2008
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Where is Blackwater when we need them.
Turning away neighborhood volunteers and forcing people to stay in "shelters" without water and food.

the federal response is nonexistant yet again...time for some change.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:17 PM on 06/15/2008

It's a sad commentary about our country.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:18 PM on 06/15/2008

In New Orleans the fed. govt. has so far given to what amounts to $68,600 PER PERSON in New Orleans. Thats not counting all the charities. Investigate for yourself? So WHERE has the money gone? I guarantee you Iowa politicians are better then their Louisiana/NOLA counterparts. I guarantee you they THEMSELVES will come back better than that mess in New Orleans.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:30 PM on 06/15/2008

The people whose homes are damaged in this flood area are nearly all low-income, with a disproportionately large african-american percentage. Just FYI, before you start saying they'll be helped where Katrina residents weren't....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:03 PM on 06/15/2008

kzzylee - just FYI, you have no idea what you are talking about. The Des Moines River flows throughout many parts of Des Moines, the Cedar River throughout many parts of Cedar Falls, Cedar Rapids, Iowa City. Neither race nor income is related to who lives near the the river bottoms in these cities.

A good sequence of events is to 1) get the facts, 2) make comments. It is important to do it in this order.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:23 PM on 06/15/2008

FEMA is different now than it was during Katrina. Katrina, sadly, was necessary to fix what was a broken system. Its an apples and oranges argument.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:13 PM on 06/16/2008
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Why isn't the media reporting on all the shooting and looting and angry citizens in the street demanding that the government take care of them? To busy with Russert? What is Bush hiding by keeping the reporters away from the real people? He must have learned from Katrina to hide the real truth. All we get is staged photo ops of people working together and helping each other out. We know from N.O. that this just doesn't happen, they need a Ray Nagin in Iowa to show them the way!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:55 AM on 06/15/2008

And no Iowa politician had a convoy to take him to his home to get all the money out he had stolen over the years (like Jefferson during Katrina)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:58 PM on 06/15/2008
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What does that have to do with anything?

PS the Obama camp seems to be putting its money and mouth in the same place because I heard they are using their email lists to put together a relief effort for Iowa.

Any body got any change?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:23 PM on 06/15/2008
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Wow. Way to stir up hatred amongst people. Is this how YOU "work together and help" others? You should be ashamed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:31 PM on 06/15/2008

I live in this area and there was a local news press conferences where the police said that amazingly they had little reports of crime. Also, while many many people have been affected by this flood a large part of the community hasn't so they are to volunteer and help out with housing and providing for the victims. This is a quite a tragedy for local residents but to compare this disaster with Katrina would be a huge insult to the residents of New Orleans....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:57 PM on 06/15/2008
    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:34 AM on 06/16/2008

Look familiar?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:46 AM on 06/16/2008
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