Atlanta Flooding: 3 Killed, 5 Missing As Storms Drench Southeast

GREG BLUESTEIN   09/21/09 10:04 PM ET   AP

Flooding

ATLANTA — Surging floodwaters ripped apart a west Georgia trailer home, drowning a 2-year-old boy swept from his father's arms. In Atlanta, stranded motorists scrambled to the tops of their car as waters rose on one of the city's busiest highways. To the north, crews worked furiously to shore up a levee holding a surging river back from an isolated town.

Storms that pounded the Southeast on Monday turned sleepy creeks into rivers, and rivers into raging floodwaters. Six people were killed across the region, including five in the Atlanta area. Aerial shots showed schools, football fields, even entire neighborhoods submerged by the deluge, sending some unlucky residents scurrying for higher ground.

"It's a mess all over," said Lisa Janak of the Georgia Emergency Management Agency.

At least two people were missing, including a Tennessee man who went swimming in an overflowing ditch on a $5 dare and a 15-year-old Georgia teen who never returned from a swim in the surging Chattooga River.

The storm came after days of rain pounded most of the region and saturated the soil. Some parts of Georgia have had more than 20 inches since Friday.

"Any rain that fell has no place to go," said Georgia climatologist David Stooksbury. "This rainfall on top of already saturated soils really made the situation worse."

Many parts of north Georgia have experienced "historic" amounts of rain well in excess of so-called 100-year predictions, which describe a storm with the likelihood of happening once every century, said Stooksbury. The downpours come just months after much of the region emerged from an epic drought that plagued the region since 2007.

As the storm front rumbled through west Georgia, it turned a normally docile creek into a surging headwater that tore apart 2-year-old Preston Slade Crawford's mobile home around 2 a.m. The boy's body wasn't found until hours later, but his parents had been rescued as another son, age 1, clung to his mother's arms in the county west of Atlanta.

"By the time we got into our vehicle, they were screaming at the back of our house," said Pat Crawford, the boy's grandmother, who watched as the family's mobile home was whisked away. "We could see them, but the current was so bad, we couldn't get to them."

Crawford said she was on higher ground, unable to help her family members. Craig Crawford clung to his 2-year-old son, but the boy was pulled away in a strong undercurrent.

To the northwest, crews in the tiny Georgia town of Trion worked to shore up a levee breached by the Chattooga River and in danger of failing. The town evacuated more than 1,500 residents, and Red Cross workers quickly set up an emergency shelter able to help hundreds nearby.

"It's a grave situation for us," said Lamar Canada, Chattooga County's emergency management director.

Most of the dead were motorists trying to navigate the treacherous roadways. Seydi Burciaga, a 39-year-old woman from Georgia's Gwinnett County, was found dead in her vehicle after it was swept off a road by flooding, said Gwinnett County Fire Capt. Thomas Rutledge.

But the surging waters weren't just dangerous for drivers. A 22-year-old Alabama man, James Dale Leigh, drowned when a pond's rain-soaked bank collapsed beneath him, said Etowah County Sheriff Todd Entrekin.

Among the hardest-hit areas was Georgia's Douglas County, where as much as a foot of rain fell Monday. Flooding there was blamed for the deaths of a man and two women in three separate situations, said county spokesman Wes Tallon.

Emergency officials were often forced to improvise to rescue dozens of people stranded in their homes and cars.

"We're using everything we can get our hands on," Tallon said. "Everything from boats to Jet Skis to ropes to ladders."

Other southeastern states were hit less severely.

In Kentucky, rescue crews went on more than a dozen runs to help stranded people after 4 inches of rain fell on parts of Louisville Sunday, said Louisville fire department spokesman Sgt. Salvador Melendez.

Water rose as high as window-level on some houses in North Carolina's Polk County, forcing emergency officials to evacuate homes along a seven-mile stretch of road. Flooding in more than 20 counties in western North Carolina closed roads, delayed school and forced evacuations.

The forecast held little good news for Georgia: Another round of storms was expected to move in Tuesday from the west.

"Don't remind me," Carroll County Emergency Management Director Tim Padgett said of the forecast. "That's the worst news we could hear."

___

Associated Press Writers Bill Poovey in Chattanooga, Kate Brumback in Carrollton, Ga., Johnny C. Clark in Trion, Ga., Errin Haines in Atlanta and Randall Dickerson in Nashville contributed to this report.

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ATLANTA — Surging floodwaters ripped apart a west Georgia trailer home, drowning a 2-year-old boy swept from his father's arms. In Atlanta, stranded motorists scrambled to the tops of their car ...
ATLANTA — Surging floodwaters ripped apart a west Georgia trailer home, drowning a 2-year-old boy swept from his father's arms. In Atlanta, stranded motorists scrambled to the tops of their car ...
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AlaskanWannaB
8 years of insanity and NOW you're mad
08:44 PM on 09/27/2009
Surely, the GOP in Georgia do not need any assistance from the Federal Government.

It's a mean thing for me to say and I feel horrible for saying it, but you should hear some of the mean things that they say and do in Georgia. I am willing to help anyone and I will donate to the Red Cross and the Salvation Army in support of the Georgia flood, but I sincerely hope that Georgia's Rethugs stay true to form and turn down any Federal and state assistance because it is socialism.
05:16 PM on 09/22/2009
The governor of Georgia is requesting Federal money. Isn't that socialism? Why should I have to pay for the loss of other people's personal property? Or subsidize loans for them? They should have planned that someday it would rain like this and flood them. Won't giving them money make them lazy and entitled? Doesn't letting them suffer make them better people? Shouldn't they have to pull themselves up by their own soggy bootstraps instead of looking for handouts?

Georgia, your conservatives have brayed and brayed about the dangers of government spending. Time to live by your words. Withdraw your request.
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AlaskanWannaB
8 years of insanity and NOW you're mad
08:50 PM on 09/27/2009
I agree. I live in Georgia and, for the most part, Georgian do not support healthcare reform or Obama. A lot of them belong to the fringe element of the GOP. Surely, they do not want Federal dollars--it's socialism.
10:21 PM on 09/21/2009
Rain, rain go away....

7 day straight of heavy downpours, raging rivers...
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MajorKong
If the pilot's good, see, I mean if he's reeeally
08:22 PM on 09/21/2009
Weren't they in a drought last year?
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08:04 PM on 09/21/2009
It must be all those "gay marriages" taking place in the south.........oh.........never mind. Perhaps gawd just wasn't any good at geography?
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KOisGod
To thine own self be true
06:43 PM on 09/21/2009
I remember that it was just a couple of years ago when a bunch of politicians in the state of GA were receiving a lot of press about holding a huge prayer session at the capitol steps to enjoin Yahweh to spare them before they all died of thirst, and give them rain.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21680340/
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=16281915

Well GA, you got it. Don't forget to thank Yahweh.
06:13 PM on 09/21/2009
Look, moderator or whomever you are, I've tried to post a message three time that is void of any vulgar remarks, and thrice it has been denied.

I don't really care what you think of this message I'm about to post, but I know it doesn't go against any rules on the huffington post, and I will continually try to post it. And if, after my repeated attempts to ask for some common discency on this story, my post is still denied, then I will contact the proper channels via Huffington Post and report this censorship..

To the people commenting about this story:

Regardless of how intellectually-handicapped the man from Tennesee's choice was, or the other adults daring him to do it, it does NOT recuse, nor abdicate, you from having dignity and showing some reverence at the loss of any life.

Try to have more class, and less crass...
06:15 PM on 09/21/2009
Thank you...
05:36 PM on 09/21/2009
only local taxes will repair that bridge right?
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jack7576
05:47 PM on 09/21/2009
:-(
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08:36 PM on 09/21/2009
Same local taxes that is covering the cost of rebuilding New Orleans....below sea level....
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
devildog21
"War is a Racket" -Smedley D. Butler MajGen USMC
05:28 PM on 09/21/2009
"Rescuers in Tennessee were searching for a Chattanooga man swept into a culvert Sunday after boasting that he could swim across a flooded ditch alongside his house for $5. The man's nephew identified him as 46-year-old Sylvester Kitchens."

The gene pool receives an unexpected boost.
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KOisGod
To thine own self be true
05:54 PM on 09/21/2009
Darwin award winner, 2009, Sylvester Kitchens.

What are the odds consumption of the after - noon beverage played a part in that act?
07:09 PM on 09/21/2009
That is cruel and tasteless.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jack7576
05:27 PM on 09/21/2009
live coverage

http://www.cbsatlanta.com/video/18900266/index.html
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
sbmulqueen
I voted for "That One!"
06:20 PM on 09/21/2009
Well, since I now have power, I can watch it, although I've lived it all day!
06:42 PM on 09/21/2009
I personally haven't lost power for any sustained periods, but I've seen our back acreage turn into a white-water ripped river and passed over a few 'water-ways' wishing I had taken the boat and not the car today. ;)

I hope you and yours are doing well! Stay dry!
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jack7576
05:18 PM on 09/21/2009
OMG !

FEMA is coming ?
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nastywolf
...to promote the general welfare...
05:14 PM on 09/21/2009
And once again these welfare states will call on CA, NY, Conn, MASS, ILL and all the other donor states to make good on their losses, even as they deny the resident of those donor states any relief from the De-cession.
06:58 PM on 09/21/2009
If GA is a welfare state, then why do I pay so much in state income taxes? I would like my welfare check please.
07:25 PM on 09/21/2009
The point is that Georgia takes more than it give in federal money.

And screws up the rest of the country with their red state voting.
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KOisGod
To thine own self be true
05:13 PM on 09/21/2009
This should end the drought there. Is lake Lanier topped off yet?
05:25 PM on 09/21/2009
I live about 5 miles from it and it's way over the 'normal' level, I think last I heard by about a foot.
05:09 PM on 09/21/2009
Given that my fellow Southerners and co-religionists love to ascribe unpleasantnesses that occur in the Northeast as God's vengeance upon that region for its rampant liberalism, I don't know that it's completely out of line to consider that the current inclement weather in Those States Formerly in Rebellion Against the Union might be God's way of telling people here to quit voting Republican.

Regardless, I feel bad for the victims, and for the family of that, um, gentleman in Chattanooga. Bless his heart.
06:56 PM on 09/21/2009
I've never voted Republican, so does that me our house will be spared?
06:56 PM on 09/21/2009
I meant, does that mean our house will be spared? I'm typing with 8 stitches in one finger.