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Roundup, Montana Floods For Second Time In 2 Weeks

Roundup Montana Flooding 2011

MATTHEW BROWN   06/ 8/11 09:21 PM ET   AP

ROUNDUP, Mont. — One of the hardest-hit towns in flood-soaked Montana took another blow Wednesday, as record flooding struck the small agricultural community for the second time in two weeks and forced residents to flee homes they had just started to clean up.

Fueled by record rains and melting snow, the Musselshell River gushed into Roundup's low-lying neighborhoods. Cars and trucks left behind were nearly submerged, and the ground floors of some homes were swamped by the river before it began receding.

Officials evacuated between 30 and 35 residences and businesses on the southern end of the central Montana town.

It was a repeat of a scene that occurred last month when the Musselshell flooded dozens of homes and businesses in Roundup. Much of the town was inundated for almost a week, contributing to Gov. Brian Schweitzer's request for a presidential disaster declaration for Montana.

Some residents were clearly frustrated to see the muddy river again gushing across their lawns and into their homes.

"We just had all this pumped out, and I'll be damned. What a waste of money," said Mike Balich, 66, as he looked over his flooded neighborhood.

Balich's house is a couple of hundred yards from the river, near a dike that had breached last month. He said he removed 12 trailer loads of ruined property from his house and a neighbor's house – and now fears he may have to do it yet again.

Still, this time Roundup was better prepared. Some residents had time to lay sandbags around their homes. And the city built protection around its water system, which was compromised during the first round of high water.

Along Highway 12, an earthen levee was built to fill in a washed-out railroad bed that had been a source of flooding in the town two weeks ago.

But after the river overtopped the levee Wednesday morning, the makeshift structure quickly eroded and water began pouring into parts of the town by afternoon, said Jolene Sealey with Musselshell County Disaster and Emergency Services.

Across from the levee, Elaine Krueger had closed her gun and pawn shop and was packing up the guns and ammunition to store them at a friend's house.

"I'm not going to trust the new levee they put over there. I'm going to get as much as I can out," she said.

More than 5 inches of rain fell Monday night between Rapelje and Ryegate, according to the National Weather Service. The combination of rain and mountain snowmelt caused the river to rise above flood stage from Harlowton to Roundup, the weather service said.

Major flooding stage for the Musselshell is 11 feet at Roundup. Last month, the river broke a record by swelling to a record 12.9 feet. The river had already surpassed that record by Wednesday morning, cresting at 14.1 feet, according to the weather service.

It was expected to drop to just over 10 feet by Friday afternoon.

Flood warnings also covered much of the rest of the state Wednesday, stretching from southwestern Missoula to northeastern Glasgow.

The Lewis and Clark County Commission declared a flood emergency Tuesday and officials issued an evacuation advisory for at least a half-dozen homes in East Helena.

Heavy rain in western Montana on Wednesday was expected to lead to sharp rises in water levels and possible landslides.

Upstream from Missoula, the Clark Fork River was expected to rise 2 feet above major flood stage by Saturday, threatening East Missoula homes and roadways in the area, meteorologists said.

Rivers and streams in other Western states, including Wyoming and Colorado, also continued to rise with mountain snowmelt.

Flood warnings remained in effect for much of Carbon and Albany counties in southeast Wyoming, as well as Lincoln County in western Wyoming.

A flash flood watch was posted Wednesday for the east side of the Bighorn Mountains and lower elevations of Johnson County, Wyo., because of the threat of rain falling on swollen creeks and streams. And a flood advisory was posted for northwest Wyoming, including Yellowstone National Park.

In Idaho, Gov. C.L. "Butch" Otter planned to visit three counties in the eastern part of the state Thursday to survey damage caused by flooding rivers in the region.

All three counties – Jefferson, Madison and Bingham – were under a state disaster declaration for flood damage and risk.

On the Missouri River, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is pushing record amounts of water through dams to get rid of the unexpectedly heavy rains that fell last month in eastern Montana and Wyoming and western North Dakota and South Dakota.

The river is expected to crest 5 to 7 feet above flood stage in Iowa and Nebraska next week, but the water will remain high until at least August.

In Nebraska, state officials have been in close contact with the flood-affected counties, are keeping an eye on possible road closures and can deploy 2,000 National Guard members at a moment's notice, Gov. Dave Heineman said Wednesday.

"We need to be prepared for the unexpected," Heineman said during a stop in Blair as he toured flood-affected towns in eastern Nebraska. "As sure as I'm sitting here, something's going to happen that we're not thinking of."

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ROUNDUP, Mont. — One of the hardest-hit towns in flood-soaked Montana took another blow Wednesday, as record flooding struck the small agricultural community for the second time in two weeks and...
ROUNDUP, Mont. — One of the hardest-hit towns in flood-soaked Montana took another blow Wednesday, as record flooding struck the small agricultural community for the second time in two weeks and...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
doctorj2u
10:17 PM on 06/09/2011
You know when rural Ameica was telling us we did not deserve to exist after Katrina, I kept telling myself "Let THEM experience the horrid pain of loss and see if they would be so judgmental then. It seems, though, it is not such a good wish. I want no one else to experience that pain.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cadsuch
A 70 retired construction worker/truck driver
12:26 PM on 06/09/2011
It's not nice to try and fool mother nature.
11:47 AM on 06/09/2011
Flood me once; shame on you. Flood me twice; shame on me.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
justkeepswimming
My microbio is empty.
12:07 PM on 06/09/2011
People in MT are being flooded out of houses built over 100 years ago in the homestead era that had never before flooded. Were they supposed to have rebuilt on higher ground in the last 2 weeks?
stillable2think
Do what works.
11:16 AM on 06/09/2011
Bismarck ND is suffering from major flooding too. The Garrison dam may or may not hold.
11:12 AM on 06/09/2011
I'm sitting at my desk looking out the window and it's still pouring outside. Three days straight now. This state is completely saturated. On the plus side, I haven't heard anybody say "we need the moisture" yet.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
justkeepswimming
My microbio is empty.
01:48 PM on 06/09/2011
On the up side, no need to visit Ireland.
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11:10 AM on 06/09/2011
Roundup Montana is being pounded with rain again today and will flood again today.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ewb2001
10:57 AM on 06/09/2011
Why are the reservoirs just now being dropped? I would have thought that they wold have known how much snow had fallen 4-7 months ago.
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11:24 AM on 06/09/2011
Much of that record snowfall came within the last two months.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
vesaversa1
Politics is made up largely of irrelevancies.
10:19 AM on 06/09/2011
I wonder if Montana want that FEMA funding now.Or are they still entirely against any federal gov. interference ?
11:14 AM on 06/09/2011
What are you talking about? Have you ever even been to Montana, or are you just painting us all as anti-government freaks to be stereotypical?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
vesaversa1
Politics is made up largely of irrelevancies.
11:21 AM on 06/09/2011
But i admit it's wrong of me to stereotype the entire state of Montana.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OMG1
The Myth Slayer
09:44 AM on 06/09/2011
Nothing to see here... move along.... The new X-Men movie is out... nothing to see here... move along... Palin is about to say something ridiculous.... nothing to see here... move along.... celebutarad has a new album out....
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fumes
Pass The Pakalolo
09:43 AM on 06/09/2011
once upon a time..

the towns were flooded by glacier:

Swiss Glacier Finely Tuned To Climate Changes
June 6, 2011
(PhysOrg.com) -- During the last ice age, the Rhone Glacier was the dominant glacier in the Alps, covering a significant part of Switzerland. Over the next 11,500 years or so, the glacier, which forms the headwaters of the Rhone River, has been shrinking and growing again in response to shifts in climate.
Until now, scientists have had no accurate way of knowing the long-term history of the glacier. Local records of the ice date back to 1602, and it is clear that the Rhone, like other glaciers in the Alps, has retreated dramatically in the past 150 years. This melting has exposed intriguing clues – remnants of trees from once-forested land, and artifacts of human settlements dating back thousands of years, to times when even more of the land was uncovered and green.
http://www.physorg.com/news/2011-06-swiss-glacier-finely-tuned-climate.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DarleenMB
09:38 AM on 06/09/2011
Yeah it's wet all right. We just aren't used to so much moisture plus snowpack is reported to be 150% of normal.

We live on Big Goose Creek and it hasn't yet reached the highest we've seen in the 15 years we've lived here. But it's getting close. (I measure by how far up the pump it goes. We're still 6 inches below the pump.)

It rained most of last night and we're supposed to get more in the next day or so. We're about 8 feet out of a 100 year flood so unless all the snow melts at once we should be fine.

Sorry about the folks up in Roundup. Dang.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KarlaElisa
The atmosphere is Toxic
10:42 AM on 06/09/2011
was just looking at property up in that area and it's WAY reasonable....20 acres for 49k. Looks beautiful.
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justkeepswimming
My microbio is empty.
12:05 PM on 06/09/2011
The winters are brutal and the summers are short. You wouldn't like it.
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11:27 AM on 06/09/2011
According the the local Forest Service office, parts of the Big Horns have 400% of the normal amount of moisture levels in the snowpack as of last week because the last few storms have been rain on the mountains and the snow has absorbed that rainfall. Should be a dozy of a runoff
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Cutiepieblue
Just another Texas Liberal
09:12 AM on 06/09/2011
Man, I wish they could send some of that water down my way. Sorry you guys are having to deal with all the water.
09:04 AM on 06/09/2011
lets hope they take "personal responsibility" and find their way out of this jam without help from our "big socialist government".
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08:59 AM on 06/09/2011
I live in the Bighorn Mountains of WY and it is a mess. Record snowfall that is now starting to melt, and it rained buckets yesterday. My thoughts are with those of you dealing with this relentless water.
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11:18 AM on 06/09/2011
But the country is sure green this year isn't it.
01:55 PM on 06/11/2011
Farmers are having problems getting crops into the muddy fields between rain storms, though. The weird weather will definitely affect food prices this year.
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11:28 AM on 06/09/2011
Been good spring cross country skiing though.
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