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Missouri River Flooding: Levees Rupture In Northwest Missouri (VIDEO)

AP    
First Posted: 06/13/11 04:41 PM ET Updated: 08/13/11 06:12 AM ET

HAMBURG, Iowa -- The swollen Missouri River ruptured two levees in northwest Missouri on Monday, sending torrents of floodwater over rural farmland toward a small town in Iowa and a resort community in Missouri.

Water rushing from a nearly 300-foot-wide hole in a levee near Hamburg was expected to continue widening the breach and reach the top of a secondary levee protecting the southwest Iowa town by Wednesday, the Army Corps of Engineers said. If the secondary wall fails, parts of Hamburg could be under as much as 10 feet of standing water.

Crews were working to add another 3 feet to the levee, said Col. Bob Ruch, the corps' Omaha District commander.

"For right now, we believe we'll be able to get that elevation raised in the time available as that water flows across in the next 48 hours," Ruch said Monday evening. "We've had excellent working conditions."

Terry Holliman, who owns an auto parts store in the town of about 1,100 residents, said water was shooting into farmland near one of three spots where the levee had previously leaked.

"It's impressive," Holliman said early Monday. "The force is unbelievable."

Officials originally estimated the levee had a 50-foot hole, but it had grown to nearly 300 feet by Monday evening and was continuing to widen.

Across the border in Missouri, the river punched a 225-foot-wide hole through a levee about 45 miles downriver near Big Lake in Holt County. The roughly 30 residents who stayed in the resort town after the river started rising were told to leave Monday.

The Army Corps of Engineers has steadily increased the amount of water it is releasing from dams along the Missouri River to account for excess water from heavy spring rains in the Upper Plains and to clear out space for above-average snowmelt coming down from the Rockies. Releases from the Missouri's five lower dams should reach 150,000 cubic feet of water per second Tuesday - more than twice the previous record releases.

The rising Missouri River has already flooded several areas in Montana, North Dakota and South Dakota, and officials predict the problems will linger through the summer.

National Weather Service hydrologist Dave Pearson described the breach near Hamburg as "pretty substantial." He said water was "flowing through quickly" but still must cross several miles of rural land to reach the Hamburg area.

It wasn't immediately clear how deep the floodwaters approaching Hamburg were on Monday or whether they would prove too much for the secondary levee built last week to protect the town. Local officials posted video of the breach that showed the water spreading over a large area of farmland.

About 300 Hamburg residents left their homes and businesses last week under an evacuation order after partial breaches in the main levee, which is located about 5 miles south in rural Atchison County, Mo.

The Army Corps of Engineers has been building up the secondary levee to protect low-lying areas of Hamburg since the partial breaches. Officials had been able to stabilize the initial leaks but had predicted the main levee eventually would fail. And it did Monday.

Corps projections show that if the secondary levee fails, the volume of water released upstream during a levee break could leave 8 to 10 feet of standing water in the southern part of Hamburg. The area includes manufacturing and agricultural businesses. Water could reach the fire station and city hall, but it likely wouldn't reach the northern part of town where most residents live.

Some residents in the flood-threatened neighborhoods were hauling the last of their belongings out of their nearly empty houses Monday, including longtime resident Pat Stoop. The last time her home flooded, in 1993, the water barely crept over the floor but it stayed for weeks. When she returned, her ceiling fan was covered in 3 inches of mold.

Thanks to the latest flood threats, she's considering a permanent move from the home where she's lived for more than four decades. Stoop said she was "thinking about 40 different things at once ... You start to do something, and then another thing, and before you know it you have 40 balls in the air. And you keep dropping them."

In Missouri, Holt County officials said the levee breach occurred about 5 miles northwest of Big Lake. Most of the town's roughly 150 residents left town before Monday and Big Lake State Park was already closed.

That breach also was pushing water into agricultural land, though a private levee that farmers built last year is helping slow the advancing flood, Holt County Clerk Kathy Kunkel said. However, officials expect the private levee to eventually fail because of the large amount of water.

Iowa officials said they would close more than 20 miles of Interstate 29 in southwest Iowa and northwest Missouri by Thursday. Northbound lanes near Hamburg will be lined with about 7,500 feet of flood barriers, Ruch said.

The record dam releases are expected to bring the Missouri River 5 to 7 feet above flood stage in most of Nebraska and Iowa before continuing into Missouri, where it may rise 10 feet above flood stage in several places and flow over the top of at least 11 rural levees. This summer's Missouri River flooding could rival the record years of 1952 and 1993 in some places.

The river is expected to remain high at least into August because as the record releases from the dams continue.

___

Funk contributed to the story from Omaha, Neb., and Maria Fisher contributed from Kansas City, Mo.

___

Online:

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Omaha District: http://www.nwo.usace.army.mil

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Kansas City District: http://www.nwk.usace.army.mil

National Weather Service river forecast: http://water.weather.gov/ahps2/index.php?wfooax

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HAMBURG, Iowa -- The swollen Missouri River ruptured two levees in northwest Missouri on Monday, sending torrents of floodwater over rural farmland toward a small town in Iowa and a resort community i...
HAMBURG, Iowa -- The swollen Missouri River ruptured two levees in northwest Missouri on Monday, sending torrents of floodwater over rural farmland toward a small town in Iowa and a resort community i...
HAMBURG, Iowa -- The swollen Missouri River ruptured two levees in northwest Missouri on Monday, sending torrents of floodwater over rural farmland toward a small town in Iowa and a resort community i...
HAMBURG, Iowa -- The swollen Missouri River ruptured two levees in northwest Missouri on Monday, sending torrents of floodwater over rural farmland toward a small town in Iowa and a resort community i...
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fumes
Midnight Toker
04:44 PM on 06/14/2011
dirt levees..

become sodden and wash away..

what's unbelievable about that?

yo army corps of engineers:

the romans would have used concrete..

and while you're at it..

the romans would have built an aqueduct..

to arizona by now for the overflow.
02:05 AM on 06/15/2011
This is not colliefornia. Do you have any idea how many there are? Some of these levees have been there for 80 years. The problem is that once built it was up to the farmers to maintain them. Many of these family farms have been bought up by corporate farmers. Do you think they give a rats @ss about maintaining them?
01:34 PM on 06/14/2011
Water needs to go somewhere. When developers fill in wetlands they are filling in water storage areas. All along the rivers and streams of America people keep filling in wetlands and then wonder why they get flooded out. We need more storm water overflow areas not less. Our Republican, let them build anywhere, deregulate everything members of congress are to blame for stopping any sensible protection of storm water storage areas.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RiverWalker
Listen to the "Before World"
01:02 PM on 06/15/2011
Excellent and right on target! Development in this country is out of control and totally motivated by short sighted money with the least attention they can get away with to sufficient infrastructure or environmental concerns.

F & F
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tom Bleecker
11:49 AM on 06/14/2011
Uh... so what was "unbelievable" about what that person was looking at right before his own eyes? It all seemed very believable to me.
11:46 AM on 06/14/2011
This is the first story I've seen on the Missouri and since the Weiner story broke I haven't heard much of anything about the Mississippi flooding and what is happening there. I have to search the web for donation centers and to find any kind of info concerning if collections of goods/donations are being started, what people need and its the same with the tornado damaged areas and victims. With what was being reported it doesn't appear that it all could have resided, been cleaned up or that everything is back to normal but the many news stations are not even mentioning it anymore.
02:08 AM on 06/15/2011
Wait. Along about December they will get it down there once it has devastated St Louis like in 1993.
11:27 AM on 06/14/2011
We should develop a strategy where overflow rain amounts could be diverted, even if it meant by mechanical pumping, into diversionary canals or pipelines aimed at regions across the country with historical droughts or periods of drought exist, to retain for such periods. This would provide Engineering, surveying, planning and construction work for millions who would be willing to work, for several decades to come. It would also benefit the nation as a whole..The Alaskan pipeline as well, is worn out and needs replacing. Why aren't we gearing up for these types of things? I believe it for short sighted political considerations. On that note, why all the hubbub about ending ethanol subsidies? They are not sustainable or for the most part effective in the big national energy and fuel picture, so why exactly is HuffPo denigrating efforts to repeal them? Just asking, but I don't really expect intelligent responses on this website.
02:13 AM on 06/15/2011
Uhm that IS the reason for the damns. There are 6 of them from Montana to the Nebraska border. The Corps had been releasing water all winter and early spring in anticipation of the melting 162% above normal snow pack in Montana. They had made enough room. That is until Montana and N Dakota reveived 8-11" of rain in a few days. The snow pack (27' of it) is STILL not melting. Because of the unseasonably cold spring. Montana had 12" of snow on Memorial Day. How was your cook out?
Boomerwoman
Momma said there'd be days like this
11:24 AM on 06/14/2011
Uh-oh. That well-known liberal UK rag "The Guardian" published this yesterday. Looks like Seattle is in for more rain, rain, rain in the years to come. And WE are the lucky ones, because what's happening...going to happen elsewhere...is frightening.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/jun/13/extreme-weather-flooding-droughts-fires
11:07 AM on 06/14/2011
I am guessing these are some of the infrastructure projects that were bypassed in the stimulus sprees the Dems hailed as being shovel ready? There is plenty of work across the country in need of being done, much of it serious repair work, but it seems Obama's focus is in his reelection and or kinfolk in the Middle East. He has zero credibility in economic matters and his constant commentary on things he should butt out of is not helping matters either. For all the diss being ladled out by HuffPo bloggers on anything pertaining to Republican, I'd say a blind dog catcher could do little worse when it comes to running things ot helping the workrers of this country gert back to work. At this point, even low paying jobs puts more food on the table than Obama's jobless recovery has managed.
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Bienville
Make levees, not war
01:51 PM on 06/14/2011
Please check this link:
http://data.bls.gov/timeseries/CES0000000001?output_view=net_1mth

I imagine you'v eheard this before, but I thought you'd like to see it. When this president took office (in 1/09), the economy was losing about 3/4 million jobs per month. This was part of an accelerating trend that had been going for about the 3 previous years.

Since 1/09, the trend has been reversed and has been going upward. In fact, since 1/10, President Obama has reported a net increase of almost as many new jobs in 16 months as his predecessor could report in 8 years. (Obama: 1.7M jobs vs Bush: 1.9M jobs.)

I believe it's hard to call this a jobless recovery when you look at the data, as I know you will.

As for the infrastructure and "stimulus sprees," the ASCE issues a report card on USA's infrastructure every now and then. This is from 2009:
http://apps.asce.org/reportcard/2009/grades.cfm

The estimate to repair our failing infrastructure is $2.2 trillion over 5 years. That's about $450 billion per year. ARRA of 2009, the so-called "stimulus bill" invested only about $100 billion in infrastructure over 2 years. I would hardly call less than 5% of the needed investment a "spree."
12:04 PM on 06/15/2011
Don't forget the Rs would only allow passage of a stimulus bill if it had tax cuts-and if it were far smaller than what we really needed. Additionally, much of the spending of the stim bill was to keep the states afloat. All people like this know is what the junkie on the radio tells them to think.
02:15 AM on 06/15/2011
These dams have been working fine since hey were built in the 1950's.
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TonyOnly
Truth matters.
09:39 AM on 06/14/2011
It seems Mother Nature has sprung a leak this spring.

We`ve seen record rain and flooding across the globe. From Australia to Europe to North America to China.

Maybe she`s trying to wash the pollution out of the atmosphere.
10:02 AM on 06/14/2011
yes there are a few record braking floods but for the most part nothing new that has not happened before in recorded history. Remember we are now the connected age so any flood anywhere is reported to you now
02:28 AM on 06/15/2011
The last flood of major proportion on the Mo was in 1952. This year will rival that. They started building the dams right after that flood. They have performed well over the last 61 years. This year is unprecedented for snowfall and rain in Montana and N Dakota. In order for the rest of the country to realize exactly how much water we are dealing with here is a link to the Oahe dam in S Dak. It is currently releasing 150,000 cubic feet of water per second. And if you are still not impressed that is equivalent to 1.1 Million gallons of water per SECOND. That would be enough water to fill a football field with 4 feet of water in one second. And this has been going on at this rate for 2 weeks now. Multiply the seconds in two weeks time 1.1 million and then multiply that times 6 cuz there are 6 dams.

Here is a link to the Oahe dam.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-B8VD5NWyko
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Adjuster
Once in awhile you get shown the light.
08:22 AM on 06/15/2011
This is the new con talking point...."ho hum, yes, the weather is somewhat extreme but it's nothing that the earth hasn't seen before. You see the records only go back so far.."

...that at least gives them the appearance of caring about record keeping while continuing to ignore trends.
Boomerwoman
Momma said there'd be days like this
11:25 AM on 06/14/2011
And drought in Europe, China and our SW and SE. Climate wierding.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Juan C Hernandez
09:30 AM on 06/14/2011
i want to know what Palin have to do with this, you better ask where is the president?, yesterday in Miami looking for money for his campaign and today traveling to Puerto Rico expending money that we don't have.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
proudtohaveserved
09:07 AM on 06/14/2011
is this what campaign was talking about?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
smp276dp
free us from the craziness
08:54 AM on 06/14/2011
I want to ask where is Palin that said this is America not the big cities. She is no where to be found. I guess people fly around the country as they need. Not as American's need. She is as advertised. Self serving narcissistic politican out for herself.
DUSAA-1775
never moon a werewolf
09:38 AM on 06/14/2011
How in the heck could you possibly have thought that this was an article for Palinhaters?
09:49 AM on 06/14/2011
Your leader was in Miami yesterday, he wasnt playing golf for a change. His Motorcade fit for a Sheik. Limousines, Fire Trucks ambulances, I thought I was in a Carnival. The Dinner for donations..$36,000.00 per person. To hear him speak $2,500.00 a person. Of course, he is the leader of the underdog. It was big corporations who pay for his campaign. He will give them the excuse to get out and build the plants out of the country. What can Sarah in Missouri?,
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Dredd
Our government is a wartocracy.
08:46 AM on 06/14/2011
There are so many people affected by these floods everywhere. Hope they can recover fully like that one town did ... they went green and became sellers of electricity after building renewable energy systems. But they did have to relocate their town.
10:04 AM on 06/14/2011
You are lying about a town going green and becoming SELLERS of electricity as there is no way that can happen
12:39 PM on 06/14/2011
People can become sellers of electricity. Just generate enough on your windmill or whatever and the electic utilites will buy it from you, Educate yourself, Trucker.
05:26 PM on 06/14/2011
If you have been anywhere near southeast Iowa or northwest Missouri you'd see all the wind turbines which create electricity, which in turn is sold to the utility companies. Rock Port is the Missouri town that is selling electricity (they are a little bit downriver from Hamburg -- but on higher ground, fortunately). Don't cuss about what you don't know.

Helpful link (because we have better things to do than go around lying all day): http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/07/080715165441.htm
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dennisc443
08:43 AM on 06/14/2011
Global Warming ~~~~~~~~~~~Why didn't Government 20,000 years ago do something then instead of waiting....? ~~~ An ice age or, more precisely, glacial age, is a generic geological period of long-term reduction in the temperature of the Earth's surface and atmosphere, resulting in the presence or expansion of continental ice sheets, polar ice sheets and alpine glaciers. Within a long-term ice age, individual pulses of extra cold climate are termed "glacial periods" (or alternatively "glacials" or "glaciations" or colloquially as "Ice Age" ), and intermittent warm periods are called "interglacials". Glaciologically, ice age implies the presence of extensive ice sheets in the northern and southern hemispheres;[1] by this definition we are still in the ice age that began at the start of the Pleistocene (because the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets still exist).[2]

More colloquially, "the ice age" refers to the most recent colder period that peaked at the Last Glacial Maximum approximately 20,000 years ago, in which extensive ice sheets lay over large parts of the North American and Eurasian continents. This article will use the term ice age in the former, glaciological, sense: glacials for colder periods during ice ages and interglacials for the warmer periods.
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Dredd
Our government is a wartocracy.
09:06 AM on 06/14/2011
Scientists are calling this the Anthropocene, which incidentally also includes the Sixth Mass Extinction.

The industrial revolution is of recent vintage, as is civilization's addiction to oil, a finite resource. When it runs out the ice caps may return after a long period of time if the temperature does not rise too much and stay too high.

http://blogdredd.blogspot.com/2011/05/on-memorial-daze-2.html
Boomerwoman
Momma said there'd be days like this
11:29 AM on 06/14/2011
Perhaps it would help if we stopped arguing about why this is happening and start to think about how to respond. At this point, whether it is natural, man-made or from God....it's time to act.

In the UK, they are raising railroads and roads near the Thames (tidal) and some low lying coastal areas in preparation for higher seas.

Sounds like some pretty good public works projects...make some jobs for the unemployed and the military who should be coming home and discharged soon.
07:52 AM on 06/14/2011
They should get rid of the USArmy Corps of Engineers and put their responsibilities in private contractor hands.

Enough already.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dennisc443
08:48 AM on 06/14/2011
OH MY GOD! JOHN, ARE YOU SUGGESTING THAT THE RIP-OFF ARTISTS ARE TO MOVE IN, TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN? ~~~~~~~~ You mother, if alive, is very ashamed of you. Do you eat with that mouth? Best pick up a book and read until you fall asleep....~~~~~Already bought and paid for....~ The United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) is a federal agency and a major Army command made up of some 36,000 civilian and military personnel,making it the world's largest public engineering, design and construction management agency. Although generally associated with dams, canals and flood protection in the United States, USACE is involved in a wide range of public works support to the nation and the Department of Defense throughout the world. The Corps of Engineers provides outdoor recreation opportunities to the public, and provides 24% of U.S. hydropower capacity.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
proudtohaveserved
09:09 AM on 06/14/2011
JOHN what ever happened to personal responsability?
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07:51 AM on 06/14/2011
We have built improvements in thousands of acres of flood plain, relying on levees to keep them dry. We also build improvements on thousands of acres of land periodically flooded by hurricanes. At times, the forces of nature are too great to keep the improvements dry. I like to call them wash and wear houses. They dry when the water goes down after a good soaking. As time goes by, there is enough detergent in the waters to wash the houses. It is fun to be alive and on earth. It is our job to use it. That makes a big mess as the centuries go by. The evidence of how we have lived over time has to be the will of either nature or the divinity, whichever turns you on. All efforts to live cleaner seem to fail, so get with the program. Mess things up and then you can go to heaven in accord with divine will.