Het midden van de Verenigde Staten heeft met zwaar weer te maken.
Overstromingen
Zeker twaalf mensen zijn er om het leven gekomen door zware overstromingen. In de staten Oklahoma en Minnesota was de situatie het ernstigst. Hevige regenval veroorzaakte modderstromen en aardverschuivingen. Er viel meer dan 30 centimeter regen.
Weggespoeld
Huizen zijn ondergelopen en wegen zijn weggespoeld. Automobilisten werden verrast en kwamen vast te zitten. Het ziet er niet naar uit dat de situatie snel verbetert. Voor de rest van de week wordt nog meer regen verwacht.
© rtlnieuws
Dan Fitch of Minnesota Energy Resources repairs a natural gas pressure regulating station by the flooded Rush Creek levee and mud sodden cars in Rushford, Minnesota August 20, 2007. Several days of heavy rains have led to flooding in parts of Minnesota and Wisconsin that have left more than a dozen dead and others missing. [Reuters]
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Boats lie off their trailers as a pump shoots flood water over a levee from the flooded Rush Creek in Rushford, Minnesota August 20, 2007.
Residents stand at the edge of their backyards and garages which collapsed from riverbank erosion into a flooding creek in Minnesota City, Minnesota
A clean-up crew worker rides in the bucket of a front-end loader as it drives through flooded streets of Rushford, Minnesota
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Children play in the silt from erosion that flood waters left behind in Brownsville, Minnesota in Houston County after a foot of rain deluged parts of southwest Wisconsin and southeast Minnesota
©China Daily | Gewijzigd: 13 februari 2017, 12:38 uur, door Joyce.s
# Upper Midwest storm that has killed six moves into Ohio
# Weary Minnesota residents begin returning to their flooded homes
# Hundreds flee their homes in southwestern Wisconsin
Back yards washed away during flooding of Garvin Brook in Minnesota City, Minnesota.
RUSHFORD, Minnesota (AP) -- A powerful storm system that swamped the upper Midwest and killed at least six people moved into Ohio on Tuesday as weary Minnesota residents returned to their water-logged homes. "Some people had to cut holes in their roofs to get out, the water was so deep," said Jack O'Donnell, sheriff's chief deputy in Fillmore County, Minnesota. At a campground in Houston County, Minnesota, picnic tables hung from trees. The storm was one of two systems that flooded towns in the Midwest and southern Plains over the weekend. Farther south, the remnants of Tropical Storm Erin killed six people in Oklahoma and eight in Texas.
Rails remain connected over a washed-out railroad bridge west of Winona, Minnesota.
I-75 stretch closed in Ohio
Tuesday morning, heavy rain in Ohio caused flooding that closed a seven-mile stretch of Interstate 75 in the northwest part of the state, the Highway Patrol said. Nearby, motorists were urged to stay out of Wyandot County because of extensive flooding caused by more than 8 inches of rain, and authorities were busy rescuing motorists from stalled cars, sheriff's Lt. Neil Riedlinger said. The water was 3 feet deep Tuesday in downtown Carey, Ohio, and a local nursing home had to be evacuated, Riedlinger said. Firefighters in the north-central Ohio town of Bucyrus used a boat to rescue families from flooded homes.
Floodwaters surround farm buildings Tuesday near La Crescent, Minnesota
Missing driver sought in Minnesota
In Minnesota, divers and the crew of a National Guard helicopter searched for Jered Lorenz, 37, whose overturned car was found lodged in the rocks along a creek near Lewiston. Fifteen miles to the south, the National Guard controlled access to the city of Rushford, escorting residents in just long enough for them to grab pets, clothing, medicine and other emergency supplies. Rushford City administrator Windy Block said residents may be allowed back for good Tuesday if electrical power is restored and the storm sewer works. She estimated that at least a third of the town's 1,800 residents suffered damage from the flooding of Rush Creek.
Watch car washed away in Rush Creek, crumbled road, washed away home
Estimated $30 million damage in Wisconsin
Hundreds of people fled their homes in southwestern Wisconsin as the deluge turned the countryside in Vernon, Crawford and Richland counties into bogs, drowned crops and strained dams nearly to the breaking point. Damage estimates hit nearly $30 million and were expected to keep climbing. Southwestern Wisconsin was under another flash flood watch Tuesday night and Wednesday, with a chance of rain through Friday, said National Weather Service meteorologist Rod Swerman. The town of Soldiers Grove, Wisconsin, lost part of a road to flooding. In nearby Gays Mills, flooding filled downtown with waist-deep, peanut butter-colored water. Mason Evans Jr. said water was 8 feet deep in his house in Gays Mills. "It broke me," Evans said. "I lost everything." E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend
Copyright 2007 The Associated Press.