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Mississippi River Flooding: Live Updates

The Huffington Post   First Posted: 05/17/11 01:48 PM ET Updated: 07/17/11 06:12 AM ET

The southern U.S. is being hit with historic floods as a massive amount of water makes its way down the Mississippi River from heavy rainfall and snowmelt.

Residents along the river have prepared for the worst, as towns work to repair the damage that has already been caused. Images from the natural disaster can be viewed here.

Learn how you can help those affected by the floods here.

HuffPost documents the tragedy along the Mississippi in live updates found below.

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HuffPost's Laura Gottesdiener reports:

This past Saturday, the Army Corps of Engineers both opened the Morganza Spillway—a massive apparatus built in the 1920s that has stayed closed for nearly 40 years—and celebrated the success of its new Facebook initiative, Operation Watershed.

The former event was precipitated by a measurement of 1.5 million cubic feet per second, the calculation of how fast the river needed to flow to necessitate opening the spillway. The later operation was measured in newer metrics: likes, newsfeed impressions and unique page views.

Conversion tables aside, both operations seem to be a success. The New York Times reported on Monday that the pressure on levees downstream of the Morganza has slackened. Meanwhile, the 18,000 news feed impressions that the Army Corps of Engineers’ Facebook page garnered on Saturday, March 14, the day the Morganza was opened, suggests that the Corps’ venture into social media is carrying out its own diversion operation: orienting people attention away from rumors and speculation and towards accurate, government-issued information.

"It’s been a success," said Army Corps spokesman and one of the Facebook page managers Steve Rochette. "We’re providing real-time information, photos and videos on the operations. They’re [the users] are getting the information first and they know that it’s accurate because it’s an official page," he said.

The Army Corps venture into providing "real-time information, photos and videos" also diverts attention away from major news outlets, another indication of a shift in the way news is disseminated and consumed. Yet Rochette said the Corps isn't attempting to usurp the media and that the agency is still issuing its slew of press releases.

Page "Operation Watershed" was inspired by a similar Facebook initiative by the Corps in late April, when the agency created a separate page before detonating the Birds Point levee in near Cairo, Ill., to divert water away from the Mississippi. That page had nearly 36,000 monthly users, said Rochette, a level of popularity that prompted the Corps to use this tactic again for the Morganza event.

Nearly 9,000 people currently "like" Operation Watershed’s page—a low number for social media but a high one given these users "like" an initiative to flood thousands of square miles of Southeast Louisiana. In addition to Corps news updates, the page acts as a forum for residents to applaud or deride the Corps’ decision, often depending on where one lives.

"THANK EACH OF YOU FOR YOUR COLLECTIVE WORK FOR OUR SAFETY. GOD BLESS," wrote one woman whose page is private but who likely lives downstream of the Mississippi.

Everyone doesn’t share her enthusiasm for the decision that Major Gen. Michael Walsh categorized as "grave." Yet most users appear appreciative of information provided, regardless of how it will affect their communities.

"Thank you for all the graphs, charts and maps," wrote one user who identified himself as a "Morgan City boy." "Very good information & for keeping the public updated as much as possible!!"

His post was on Friday. By Monday, his city was in flood-fighting mode, building a floodwall, laying sandbags and sinking a several-hundred-foot-long barge into the channel to block the coming water, said Army Corps Spokesman Bob Anderson. Some parts of Morgan City are still expected to get up to five feet of standing water, but estimates grow lower each day, especially due to the preparations.

"There’s some tough folks down there," said Anderson. "They’re not just going to get flooded; they’re going to fight it."

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HuffPost's Chris Kirkham reports:

PORT GIBSON, Miss. -- Little Bayou Pierre snakes through this tiny town of antebellum mansions and crumbling, vine-covered shacks.

But for nearly two weeks now, the bayou has been flowing the wrong way. Amid intense backward pressure from the Mississippi River, Little Bayou Pierre has outgrown its name -- and overflowed its banks -- slowly submerging parts of this town.



This tributary to the Mississippi River is usually little more than a small stream with sandy shoals, but in the past few days the bayou has already swallowed the home across the street from Debra Foster. And on Monday afternoon the water was slowly making its way uphill on Shipp Street and into Foster's yard. She and her family were leaving to stay with a friend. They placed sandbags in the doorway as a last-ditch effort to prevent flooding.

"Good luck -- that's all you can wish for," said Pocahontas Brown, who lives two houses up the road from Foster. Brown said she used to live higher up in the hills and rues her decision to move to Shipp Street.

Several other houses were within inches of being submerged. With the crest of the river still several days away, residents fear it's only a matter of time before they are inundated. Like other parts of the Mississippi Delta, Port Gibson sits more than a dozen miles from the river, but its proximity to tributaries and backwater streams leaves it at much greater risk of flooding than it otherwise would be.

One of the oldest towns in Mississippi, Port Gibson has a history deeply ingrained in the Civil War. The wooden welcome sign to town reads, "Too beautiful to burn," a statement made by Ulysses S. Grant after a major battle in the area, according to legend.

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HuffPost's Laura Gottesdiener reports:

The Feds have given the Army Corps of Engineers the official approval to open the Morganza spillway Friday evening, an act that would avoid massive flooding in New Orleans, but will blanket about 3,000 square miles of southeast Louisiana in standing water up to 25 inches high.

The President of the Mississippi River Commission Major General Michael J. Walsh gave the orders early Friday evening, saying that the New Orleans District Commander Colonel Ed Fleming should to be prepared to open the spillway within the next 24 hours.

Opening this floodway, which has remained closed for 38 years, will divert the flooding Mississippi River down the Atchafalaya River, which is to the west of the Mississippi, and runs through mostly sparsely populated areas of southeast Louisiana.

On a boat on the Mississippi River itself, Army Corps officials told The Huffington Post that it’s not absolutely definite the spillway will be opened, but the current predictions about the water’s flow rate certainly indicate that it will happen.

The limit for opening the Morganza is a flow rate that exceeds 1.5 million cubic feet per second, and currently the projections are at 1.6 million.

“Before the predictions were at 1.8 million, so we’re going in the right direction,” said Bob Anderson of the Army Corps. "We’re hoping over the next 24 hours it will decrease, but right now the projection is 1.6 million.”

Anderson said that the major consideration for opening the Morganza spillway is protecting the existing levees and floodwalls that control the river. If those fail, he warned, there could be an uncontrollable breach with massive amounts of water flowing in unpredictable directions, including into New Orleans and Baton Rogue.

As for the state of the river itself, he said that it’s looking wilder than he’s ever seen it.

“The river’s big, it’s wide, it’s nasty,” Anderson said. “It’s got a lot of floating debris and trees. It is the big money.”

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HuffPost's Laura Gottesdiener reports:

As the torrent of water from the swollen Mississippi swirls ever farther south, economist are projecting billions in damages in the South. Farmers are lamenting thousands of crops destroyed. And residents in Southeast Louisiana are contemplating evacuating their homes in the event that the Morganza Spillway is opened on Saturday.

But those ankle deep in the flood zone may also have a more insidious concern: ants. Humans aren't the only species that depend upon dry land for housing, and the floodwater is flushing out whole colonies of fire ants. The insects' response: Thousands will cling together to form a ball that floats along the surface of the water, threatening to sting anything in its path.

The AP reports from Yazoo City, Mississippi, that ants are "seemingly everywhere."

Entomologist are not at all surprised by the phenomenon and caution that it's more than an environmental curiosity.

"I'm sure people can get stung if they're walking in the water," said Jim Kalisch, an entomologist and the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

"It's really painful," he added, explaining that the hundreds of ants will grab on to one's skin with their mandibles and transfer venom from stingers on the tip of their abdomens. The venom causes intense pain and blistering.

Of course, ants aren't the only species flushed out by the flood. Environmentalists also predict poisonous snakes and other animals will surface in increasing numbers.

"The flood mobilizes a lot of things that can be nuisance," said Donald Boesch, President of the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science. "Like poisonous snakes — they get washed out of where they normally live and create all sorts of mischief," he said.

Check out this video of a mass of floating fireants ants on the Mississippi River during flooding in 2009:

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AP reports:

YAZOO CITY, Miss. — A slow migration unfolded in central Mississippi on Thursday, with people and animals seeking higher ground to escape the flooding from the Mississippi River and its tributaries.

In Louisiana, water poured over a century-old levee, flooding 12,000 acres of corn and soybeans despite farmers' frantic efforts to shore up the structure. Downstream, officials with the Port of New Orleans said the Coast Guard could close the river to ships as early as Monday, halting traffic on one of the world's busiest commercial waterways.

After swamping low-lying neighborhoods in Memphis, Tenn., earlier this week, the rising water is bringing misery to farms and small waterfront communities in Mississippi, Louisiana and Arkansas. The Corps of Engineers is considering whether to open the Morganza spillway, which would flood thousands of homes and acres of farmland along a 100-mile stretch in Louisiana but take the pressure off levees and help to protect Baton Rouge, New Orleans and the oil refineries in between. A decision is expected in the next several days.

In Yazoo City, Miss., Brett Robinson drove slowly down River Road near his farm Thursday, staring at corn fields that are beginning to look like lakes. He stopped his truck, pulled out a rifle and shot a wild hog swimming through his corn. He knows he'll lose the crops to the flood anyway, but that hog could be a nuisance even longer than the water.

"We lose a lot of crops to them," he said of wild pigs. "We can lose 40 acres in a night. They can give birth three times a year and have 15 in a litter."

Wild pigs multiply faster than farmers, hunters and wildlife officials can deal with them. The flood is driving them into the open, giving farmers an opportunity to kill them.

Read more here.

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To view a slideshow with the latest photos of the tragedy along the Mississippi, click here.

AP: Seth Robinson, 4, looks around at the Yazoo River flooding of his father's corn crop on farm land along River Road, north of Yazoo City, Miss., Thursday, May 12, 2011. Thousands of acres of corn, wheat, soybean and cotton crops are now underwater as the tributaries are backing up from flooding along the Mississippi River. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

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HuffPost's Laura Gottesdiener reports:

As the flood crest of the overflowing Mississippi River slowly moves south, state officials are debating whether the Army Corps of Engineers should open the Morganza Spillway, a floodway in Louisiana located on the western bank that can be used to control the flow of water downstream. Opening the Morganza Spillway would divert the growing crest away from major cities downstream, including Baton Rouge and New Orleans. Instead, the water would flow down the Atchafalaya River, which is to the west of the Mississippi in Louisiana, and ultimately out to the Gulf.

The Morganza Spillway has only been opened once before, in 1973. Officials estimate that opening it now could flood 3 million acres of farmland. The area is not densely populated, but it does include Morgan City and Houma.

In anticipation of the possible opening, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal told residents yesterday in Southeast Louisiana to consider evacuating their homes.

"If the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers decides to open the Morganza Spillway, it could take approximately a week from the day they start, and roughly 3,900 people and 2,600 structures would be impacted by the high water," Jindal told CNN.

Don Boesch, President of the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, told HuffPost yesterday that officials are growing close to making the decision, and that the possibility of the crest swamping New Orleans may force their hands.

“If the alternative is flooding new Orleans again, there is no choice.”

The Army Corps. of Engineers predicts that Saturday could be the day it opens the Spillway if the rate of water flow continues as expected.

See a map of the Morganza Spillway and the possible diverted flooding by The Washington Post.

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The southern U.S. is being hit with historic floods as a massive amount of water makes its way down the Mississippi River from heavy rainfall and snowmelt. Residents along the river have prepared f...
The southern U.S. is being hit with historic floods as a massive amount of water makes its way down the Mississippi River from heavy rainfall and snowmelt. Residents along the river have prepared f...
 
 
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10:06 AM on 05/18/2011
I wonder how many coal ash dumps have been flooded.
10:08 PM on 05/17/2011
If you build in a flood plain, eventually you will get flooded out.

Do not build in a flood plain.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DanoX
I'll be your snack-pack baby!
11:18 PM on 05/17/2011
Or at least build your home up off the ground.
08:24 PM on 05/17/2011
This flooding makes me very very sad for the displaced people and the devastation we cause by flooding areas. It isn't just crops, everything drowns that can't outrun it and they have babies this time of year. Imagine if some species flooded 120 sq miles where you live.

The reason I say this is because everything we do is about survival as a species. Green isn't a trend, it is about having oxygen, food and water.

The cause of urban heat islands was found and showed how all of us are contributing to the problem of severe weather by not paying attention. Building development is supposed to reflect or protect from solar radiation to pass building code and we missed it. Los Angeles alone spends over 100 million a year in energy responding to buildings being radiated, they are not addressing cause.

Here is a link to see what happens in the infrared spectrum. Look at National Weather Service show winds move across the country. Heat rises and changes climate because we are not supposed to warm the outside air. Air conditioning is in fact refrigeration and tells you there is a building problem. http://www.thermoguy.com/blog/index.php?itemid=59

Paint or shade without re-inventing the wheel and all the laws are there. Much more severe weather is coming.
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08:21 PM on 05/17/2011
One obvious aspect in this flood that we might overlook is the fact that communities were involved in the decisions made to open holes in the levies upstream and are intimately involved in response and relief. Many parts of the world leave their citizens clueless when these decisions are made and they end up taking huge losses and get no relief afterwards. A silver lining in the MS delta today is that we have a somewhat more democratic process for disaster containment than might otherwise have been the case.
08:20 PM on 05/17/2011
I still can't see how they justify flooding one area to save another. Are the people in the purposely flooded areas less important?
Here in northern Ohio, any rain now is a flooding rain. The ground has been saturated completely for the past three months. We haven't seen the sun in a week and the next three days are more of the same. It's like living inside a cloud. I am so tired of turning on the Weather Channel and seeing seven strainght days of rain in the forecast. Every darn day. The kicker is that no matter how bad it is today, it will be worse tomorrow.
We are praying for those affected down south.
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CommonSense411
I live my life by my conscience.
07:46 PM on 05/17/2011
what a cute little boy
07:34 PM on 05/17/2011
BRILLIANT PLAN!!! Flood the farmlands to save the more populace cities. Then whatcha gonna do with the hungry people?
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jflorish
08:04 PM on 05/17/2011
I'm pretty sure they know which area can be replaced easier. I highly doubt they also get their information from huffington post :)
08:40 PM on 05/17/2011
You have too much faith in man.
06:51 PM on 05/17/2011
That kid should be warned about toenail fungus.
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cavegal
The Revolution Will Not Be Privatized
10:46 PM on 05/17/2011
Too late now!!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Tom Joad
"While there is a lower class, I am in it "
03:58 PM on 05/17/2011
...stay out of those fire ants!...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Nosybear
Liar, damn liar, statistician and brewer
03:16 PM on 05/17/2011
A new tool in the fight against floods? Are they using Bobby Jindal now?
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Vegasyankee
Making Energy for a Strong America!
03:48 PM on 05/17/2011
FYI - Jindal has been awesome through this and has been working in step with Obama.  They were way ahead of the ballgame and that's one reason we've had no loss of life.

Of course you have to actually pay attention to the situation and whats happening here to know that instead of just following the pack.
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olitenup
03:53 PM on 05/17/2011
So that is pretty funny.
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Bryan Rae
02:54 PM on 05/17/2011
if the US goverment dont care for its own people how can we expect it to care about the rest of the world that it claims to police for the benifit of all the british and the euro goverments are all the same time to say enuogh the people of this planet ask for three basic things food water and shelter simple reguest but politics gets in the way love and blessing to all look not at our differences but look to our similarities tell the ptb the tide is turning we refuse to support and pay for your lies
03:46 PM on 05/17/2011
Go back to school, learn English, collect your thoughts, then re-post.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
spinns17
TEAMSTER
07:19 PM on 05/17/2011
we need to get back to takeing care of the people ,not wall street.
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Forester
Overeducated woods worker.
02:11 PM on 05/17/2011
USACE better watch out they don't get unfriended!
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AAHewetson
Intelligence is just fine with me
01:58 PM on 05/17/2011
One thing that has been overlooked in all of the discussion (so far as I can tell). Floodwaters were, historically, the source of soil and nutrients for bottomlands and can, over the long term, be beneficial to primary productivity.

It remains to be seen whether or not this will be the case this time around as floodwaters are potentially toxic these days.
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olitenup
03:57 PM on 05/17/2011
Potentially toxic? Between the fungicide, pesticides, and God knows what old barrels are holding, and I imagine old cemetaries will be popping up some interesting things and raw sewage, I think it is fairly safe to say, that water is toxic. When the water recedes it is really going to be a toxic quagmire.
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01:56 PM on 05/17/2011
Maybe if someone claiming to be from Al Qaida or the Taliban claimed responsibility for global warming and the floods coming down the Mississippi, the US govt might actually wake up and deal with the problems.

Nahhhhh.....

The last thing the US will ever actually do is protect real Americans and provide for real American infrastructure that doesn't give the corporate campaign contributors their 50% cut off the top.

Before us Murkins would believe it, we'd have to see the REAL birth certificate of the guy behind the floods.
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AbeMartin
The best person fer a job is never a candidate
02:21 PM on 05/17/2011
If someone from al Qaida or the Taliban opened up the floodgates and flooded hundreds of thousands of acres of prime farmland and destroyed thousands of homes and businesses, we would have bombers in the air right now.
 
As it is, since the destruction is being done under the authority of the Army Corps of Engineers, citations and promotions will be handed out.
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Ergon
Man From Atlan
06:45 PM on 05/17/2011
God's?
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alteredstory
Hold on to the center
01:52 PM on 05/17/2011
That lump in the middle is the head of someone who was wading nearby and got caught :P

(disclaimer - no it's not.)