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Mississippi River Floods 2011: Deep South Braces For Surge Of Water Not Seen Since 1927

Mississippi River Floods 2011

By CAIN BURDEAU   04/28/11 06:40 PM ET   AP

NEW ORLEANS -- A surge of water not seen since the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 is forecast in coming days to test the enormous levees lining the Mississippi River on its course through the Deep South, adding another element of danger to a region already raked by deadly tornadoes and thunderstorms.

Mississippi's and Louisiana's governors issued flood warnings Thursday and declared states of emergency. Authorities along the swollen waterway in both states are warning nearby residents to brace for the possibility of any flooding. River boat casinos in Mississippi are closing and levee managers are readying sand bags and supplies – and the manpower to build the defenses – to fight the rising river along hundreds of levees in both states where the river crosses en route to the Gulf of Mexico.

"We're going to do everything we can to prepare for the worst-case scenario while we still are hoping for the best case," Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal said, adding the state was prepared to withstand the test.

Louisiana is still recovering from powerful Hurricane Katrina, which struck in August 2005 as levees broke under surging waters and more than 80 percent of New Orleans was flooded. Since 2005, the corps has spent billions of dollars in repairing levees and improving the city's flood protections, but the vast majority of that work has been focused on protecting the city from hurricane surge, not river flooding.

While authorities who manage the levees express confidence that those structures can withstand the enormous surge, the high waters are expected to put pressure on the levees for as many as 10 days – and that has officials concerned.

"It is going to be a slow-moving crest and what that means is it does put pressure on those levees," Jindal said.

River flooding, fed by heavy rains across the Mississippi River valley, is already a serious problem hundreds of miles upriver, particularly in Missouri where the Army Corps of Engineers is considering whether to blow up a levee to relieve pressure on Cairo, Ill, a bottleneck where the Ohio and Mississippi rivers meet.

As the water makes its way downriver, the lower portion of the Mississippi will be tested.

The river is forecast to crest at 53.5 feet on May 18 at Vicksburg, Miss., a key gauge. That is the highest river stage recorded at Vicksburg since the catastrophic flooding of 1927 when the river reached 56.6 feet and would have kept on rising if levees hadn't given way, causing massive flooding and killing hundreds. After that calamity, the nation undertook an aggressive $13 billion plan to build levees and floodways that would avert such a scale of flooding again.

The crest of the high river is expected to reach New Orleans on May 22, and Jindal said the corps was looking at opening a major spillway, the Bonnet Carre, just north of the city to relieve pressure.

Those who manage the levees built up since 1927 expressed confidence in them.

"The levees are designed to withstand 65 feet," said Robert Anderson, a corps spokesman in Vicksburg. But he added that "it has never been tested before quite like it has been tested now."

"I do not expect any breaches on this levee system today. I think we can withstand the water," said Reynold Minsky, the president of the Fifth Louisiana Levee District, which oversees about 260 miles of levees along the Mississippi.

Still, there are concerns.

About 241 miles of levees in the Mississippi River system between Cape Girardeau, Mo., and the Gulf of Mexico need to be heightened or strengthened to meet the corps' standards, according to the corps.

"We have some low points," said James Shivers, the superintendent of the Fifth Louisiana Levee District.

Levee officials said crews would work around the clock to contain leaks that spring up along the levees. Such leaks, known as sand boils, can undermine a levee and cause a section to collapse.

In Mississippi, gambling regulators started closing down nine barge casinos at Tunica. Resorts was closed Thursday, to be followed by one casino each on Friday and Saturday and three each on Sunday and Monday, said Larry Gregory, head of the Mississippi Gaming Commission.

He estimated 10,000 workers would be affected by the closings.

"We anticipate that all of the river casinos will close at some point as the pig goes down the python," said Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour

_______

Associated Press writers Alan Sayre in New Orleans, Molly Davis in Baton Rouge, La., and Emily Wagster Pettus in Jackson, Miss.

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NEW ORLEANS -- A surge of water not seen since the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 is forecast in coming days to test the enormous levees lining the Mississippi River on its course through the Deep So...
NEW ORLEANS -- A surge of water not seen since the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 is forecast in coming days to test the enormous levees lining the Mississippi River on its course through the Deep So...
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09:18 AM on 05/11/2011
That climate change in 1927 must have been a real doozy.
11:59 PM on 05/13/2011
During the great flood of 1927 were there record wildfires and drought in Texas, record flooding in New England, crazy thunderstorms throughout the southeast, and drought causing record low river levels in Britain? At the same time?

And all on the heels of unprecedented flooding in Thailand, the third year of near record flooding in southern Africa, major flooding in Australia driven by the strongest Southern Oscillation on record, record rains in Colombia, etc. etc.? You get my point.

If the answer is, "No, it was simply a great flood," then climate change in 1927 was probably not a real doozy. But it sure seems to be now.
07:35 PM on 05/15/2011
From what I have read this is one of the worst if not the worst flooding in many parts of the midWest and Wouth in the last 100 years. The tornadoes were also the worst in all of history. We had one in 100 years flooding in Tennessee, Iowa, Rhode Island, and a number of other places all in the past two years (not to mention the flooding in Pakistan, Colombia, Australia or the wildfires in Russia, all the worst in history). The Texas drought and wildfires I believe are also the worst in 100 years.

We need to wake up. Climate change is here and its staring us right in the face. We can choose to close our eyes while we're eaten alive or open them and fight for our future survival.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bcmom
Stop breeding puppies
08:29 PM on 05/03/2011
There is no climate chance!
01:33 PM on 05/03/2011
Oh goody. More of my tax dollars going to help people whose lives will be ruined by natural disasters, exacerbated by environmental degradation and climate change...in states that send politicians to DC who keep moving our agenda backwards.

What if I didn't have to bail out people who voted for politicians who don't want to protect the environment and deny global warming? What if your house floating away is God's way of telling you that you need to stop trying to control what I do with my uterus and take better care of the beautiful planet the good Lord gave us?
01:58 AM on 05/06/2011
when a natural disaster strikes you and your family you will need help and it will be everyone else's tax dollars paying for your assistance.
01:28 AM on 05/07/2011
Right on Rosie! I hear ya!
D-Driller
my micro-bio is empty
01:15 AM on 05/01/2011
All this water and not enough reservoirs out west to hold it... Makes you wonder what our drought situation would be like here out west if we weren't draining lakes and putting condos up in natural impoundment areas...
03:24 PM on 04/30/2011
water just made it into our house today. Should get both of our floors by crest. Crest in Greenville should be on the 15th at 60 feet.
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Tom Jacobs
Retired blue collar Union and progressive activist
04:18 PM on 05/07/2011
good luck. I hope you are being safe.
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Daniella Lucia
01:32 PM on 04/30/2011
ew why would anyone walk in that dirty water
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GeoffTheLlama
Number one in the hood, G.
06:37 PM on 04/30/2011
...because they don't have a choice, maybe?
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
11:12 PM on 04/29/2011
Ya'll are filled with disgust... Look at Japan it is still going to take years to rebuild but they see the hope... The people devistated by these tornados see hope!!! The only thing you can do is prepare and let it come... You cannot stop it... Me and my family suffered through the flood last year and we just delt with it!!! Now there is possibility of another but we can only prepare and deal... And I am not anti-american but I myself have no faith in our government based on what has been seen... Mainly because our government cares more about the economy than they do about the lives of the people that make this country go round... A disaster strikes and all you here is about the economy and money!!! You can't put your faith in money... MONEY CANNOT SAVE YOU!!!
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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cabrobst
Return the top rate to 91%.
04:35 PM on 04/29/2011
Is Louisiana still even habitable?
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
05:36 PM on 04/29/2011
Was it ever?
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Bienville
Make levees, not war
08:26 AM on 04/30/2011
Thank you for staying away.
01:51 AM on 05/06/2011
no, it's not habitable; millions of people with no food, plant life, homes, drinking water...lol...where are y'all from? west virginia?
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Bienville
Make levees, not war
08:25 AM on 04/30/2011
Yes, and all the more so due to your continued absence.
Judith Martin
Retired librarian
04:07 PM on 04/29/2011
As a survivor of the man-made, post-Katrina floods that drowned 80% of New Orleans, where I live, I can say that I also have learned not to trust anything that the U. S. Government says to me about how it is concerned about my safety from floods and other disasters. It was the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers that was responsible for the shoddy levee construction on the outfall canals that failed. If these reinforced levees can stand up to a water surge, I may begin again to believe in miracles. But then again, since the government is concerned, I'm not going to wait for miracles. I'm packing everything so that if I see a sheet of choppy water start to flow down the street in front of my house, I'll have a chance to drive my car out of the area before everything "goes under".
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hjalmar
May the dawn soon come.
04:32 PM on 04/29/2011
Judith, did you see the Harry Shearer film: "The Big Uneasy?" I did not, but heard it was particularly hard on the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers.
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steve11407
pending approval and won't be displayed until ...
08:48 PM on 04/29/2011
Don't blame the Army Corp of Engineers. It was your State and local politicians that took the Fed money over the years meant for levy improvement and spent it on something else after they skimmed their share off the top. Living in east Texas I've watched Lousiana's crooked politicians operate all my life. How many governors went to the pen? One's son went with him. Everybody in government has been on the take at one time or another. Of course you already know that so why blame the Feds?
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Bienville
Make levees, not war
08:40 AM on 04/30/2011
Did you know that Congress has given the Corps exclusive authority over the Mississippi River flood control and over the hurricane protection "system" (ahem) around New Orleans?

Perhaps you should read the Executive Summary of the ILIT report. It's quite eye-opening about the incompetence, malfeasance and misfeasance of the Corps.

I will make it easy for you.
http://www.ce.berkeley.edu/projects/neworleans/
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CrescentCityRay
06:34 PM on 04/30/2011
Locals have no control of flood control projects. Not in New Orleans, not where you live, not anywhere. Only the Corps of Engineers is responsible, not accountable, just responsible. That's the law. Look it up.
04:02 PM on 04/29/2011
My heart goes out to the families and communities for their losses. This tragedy is supposed to remind people about sustainability which means not impacting the planet that provides us life. It is our objective or we perish as a species.

Here is a result when the Canadian Government or Whitehouse doesn't respond to their science professionals. Policy is developed with science, not the other way around.

Weather is the basic interaction of cold and warm air with water vapor. We don't want to heat the atmosphere because it changes weather around the globe. Finding the cause of urban heat islands showed a major source of global warming not being considered. Buildings are supposed to reflect solar radiation or protect from it or buildings are radiated. Here is an example in the infrared spectrum of buildings being radiated by the sun and becoming urban heat islands. Hard to imagine other states and countries contributed to the weather severity. Show your meteorologists this, we didn't consider this heat that would change climate. http://www.thermoguy.com/blog/index.php?itemid=56
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fgbouman
Curmudgeon & Designer
07:01 PM on 04/29/2011
Thanks for the info. Too bad people can't keep religion and politics out of science. Some of us prefer reality-based discussions.
03:22 PM on 04/29/2011
Messages are a little harsh and granted some of the people in these states have voted in the worst of the government. For that matter Wisconsin has the same problem. Expecting the far right to do anything other than drop the check on someone else is a little ridiculous.
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All-hat-no-cattle
Full of fun & proud of it!
03:30 PM on 04/29/2011
Best application of common sense I've read today. Kudos. Fanned.
Judith Martin
Retired librarian
04:18 PM on 04/29/2011
What I write here may not please many of my fellow citizens in the South, but because I saw how the government lies about flood protection -- in 2005 when the cheaply-built levees failed in southeast Louisiana, and for starters, 80% of New Orleans was flooded and to a large measure, destroyed. It was the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, starting in 1897, when swamps to the north of the city as it existed along the Mississippi River, that began the levee building "out there", and assured the people who built in the new suburban areas that they would be adequately protected from flooding.

Ha! The work was shoddy. Political friends of local politicians made off with lots of money. As for whom we voted for, I am at the point where I cease to vote altogether. I have also posted other comments here relative to this subject, apart from the voting.

To put it succinctly, I don't trust the U. S. Government, or any government at any level, since 2005 when I lost everything in the man-made, post-Katrina floods.
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altheschrod
I'm pedaling hard.
10:02 PM on 04/29/2011
You said yourself "political friends of local politicans" skimmed the levee mony, so what has the U.S. government got to do with that?
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snorrk
A Citizen against Citizen's United
03:01 PM on 04/29/2011
I don't wish disaster or calamity on anybody and my heart goes out to those suffering. That being said, and since these states are deeply red it is my fervent hope they reap the value of their convictions for a smaller government and handle their on problems without making the rest of the taxpayers pick up the tab.

For liberals suffering in these states, it is time to become more active in government. Make you friends, relatives, and neighbors aware of how only liberal ideas and politics offer the only solutions to their plight and conversely how conservative ideas only allow them to sink or swim on their own ability (unless they are a corporation and large enough to get special earmarks and tax breaks).
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JWebberPhoto
Ain't skeered
03:13 PM on 04/29/2011
"these states are deeply red "

It's more complex than the bipolar media myth you repeat. Take a look at the county-by-county maps from Purple America:
http://www.princeton.edu/~rvdb/JAVA/elections/AllYears.gif
03:18 PM on 04/29/2011
you get what ya pay for.
I don't wish this on anyone but they have to realize this is the consequence of their choice.
I say this as someone who lives in the deep south, deep red south, deep red poor south, deep red poor uneducated south.... well, you get my point.
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snorrk
A Citizen against Citizen's United
03:51 PM on 04/29/2011
I feel your pain.
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cabrobst
Return the top rate to 91%.
04:38 PM on 04/29/2011
So move to New York.
Here we have Fracking threatening our water supply.
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GeoffTheLlama
Number one in the hood, G.
03:01 PM on 04/29/2011
Querent
Iconoclast, critic, and grammar police official
Become a fan (526)
12 hours ago
Obviously, this devastatio­n is the judgement of God on the South for being predominan­tly Republican­, for creating the Tea Party, and for religious fanaticism­. Go, God!
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Ah, I love when people take actual tragedies as an excuse to bash Christians instead of focusing on the devastation and negative impact it had on people. It's in no way hypocritical of them at all to do so, no sir, especially since we all know that ALL southerners are fanatical Christian Tea Party Republicans, right? There's no leeway there at all.

Grow up, dude. So much fail in one post.
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All-hat-no-cattle
Full of fun & proud of it!
03:25 PM on 04/29/2011
GeoffTheLlama, I'm in full agreement with YOU.
That snark and snide so-called "comment" by Querent is despicable
at a time like this. Who else--but someone who enjoys watching others'
squirm during tragedies-would have such bad taste and poor common
sense as to USE this disaster for cruel fun and games?

I fan you for bringing it to our attention.

If natural disasters bring out the best in human nature, it's probably
also true that they bring out the worse!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
hazbro24
When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro- HST
12:17 PM on 05/01/2011
"If natural disasters bring out the best in human nature, it's probably
also true that they bring out the worse!"

I'd say it's the internet that brings out the worst--people lose their filters online.
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chesswizard3
Truth can never be taken away.
03:35 PM on 04/29/2011
I wish no harm on anyone and will not gloat over sufferring. I just do not understand however how christian conservatives can allow Robertson to say that Haiti deserved Gods wrath without objecting to such absurd statement. I did not see conservatives take him to task, so that is hypocritical as well dont you think?
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GeoffTheLlama
Number one in the hood, G.
03:38 PM on 04/29/2011
Well, I don't see how anyone could have actually stopped him or disallowed him from making the comment, but yes. His statement was reprehensible and he should have been taken to task for it. That doesn't make it okay for others to now relish what is happening down there or in any way imply that they "deserved it", however.
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jafsie
Fighting for the rights of the already-born
09:52 AM on 04/30/2011
Yes -- of course it's hypocritical. Which is pretty much exactly what one has come to expect from the religious right and its panderers.