|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
River crests earlier than expected in Davenport
DAVENPORT, Iowa (CNN) -- City officials keeping a close eye on their leaky temporary dikes Tuesday got a bit of a break as the swollen Mississippi River crested earlier than expected in Davenport, Iowa. The river hit a high water mark of 22.33 feet at 1 p.m., inches below the 23-foot maximum the sandbag levee could hold back. The river began creeping down slowly, to 22 feet 3 inches by late afternoon, according to Davenport city spokeswoman Jennifer Nahra. The crest was the third-highest river level on record for the city. All that water still threatens the city because it could break through the sandbag levee, which was built to withstand a river level of 23 feet -- inches above the 1993 high water mark of 22.63 feet. Forecasters also fear the floodwaters could stay around awhile after the crest.
"It's going to be very slow going down, so we'll be fighting this river for probably another week-and-a-half in a serious way," said Dee Bruemmer, the city's public works director. But residents were crossing their fingers that the river would continue to fall, and dry weather forecasts for the next few days should improve those odds. More guardsmen on dutySome other cities also got a break -- upstream at Camanche the river crested a foot below the 1965 record, and it was expected to crest at 2 feet below the record in Buffalo. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers said that 181 billion gallons of water would flow by Davenport, at a speed of 4 mph, during the 12 hours before and 12 hours after the crest. The normal flow for this week in late April is 69 billion gallons per day moving at 2 mph. Pumps set up beside the dikes in many areas kept up through the morning and into the afternoon as water pushed into streets through storm sewers and other underground pathways. Earlier, the Iowa National Guard added another 30 troops to the riverfront in Davenport to help with the sandbagging effort. "Our largest concentration of soldiers today is in Davenport, where we have approximately 210 soldiers on duty," said Guard spokesman Col. Robert King. "They are assisting local authorities with levee security, patrolling and sandbagging operations." Another 15 members of the Guard continue to help with flood control in Marquette in northeastern Iowa, where the river crest has already passed but where the water remains high. A survey of homes in Davenport found 38 with serious damage so far, and officials were scrambling to keep that number as low as possible. But other river properties were already flooded, and the John O'Donnell Stadium, one of the nation's most picturesque minor league parks, was under several feet of water. Controversy over Davenport's lack of flood wallMeanwhile, Davenport faced some criticism from the nation's top disaster administrator who said the city needs to do more to protect itself against floods. The city -- the only major town on the upper Mississippi without a permanent flood wall -- has opted to keep its river view unobstructed -- Mayor Phil Yerington noted that tourism dollars for Davenport's various festivals and casinos brings the area $100 million per year. "I don't think we're in a position to let that go," Yerington said. The criticism from Federal Emergency Management Agency director Joe Allbaugh, who said that U.S. taxpayers may be footing too much of the bill to keep Davenport's tourism dollars flowing, angered Yerington. "When no other part of the country is punished for natural disasters ... don't make it look like we don't pay any dollars anywhere, (that) we just sit here in the Midwest, we flood every three years and we stand here with our hands out, because that's not what's going on," Yerington said. "We contribute heavily to the disasters that go on in other areas around the country, and nobody hears us complain," he said. "Don't insult what we've tried to do, and the people who we are, because we're in the Midwest and live along a major river."
Iowa Gov. Thomas Vilsack didn't step into the fray, saying it's a local decision. 100-year floods more frequentSevere spring floods in Iowa have begun to seem more like the rule than the exception. Ironically, an increase in dikes along the river to contain floodwater in narrower channels has helped raise flood waters to levels once expected only once every 100 years. "Iowa has been hit with three 100-year floods in the last 20, 30 years, so perhaps we need to recalculate what a 100-year flood is," said Vilsack. Fifteen miles upriver from Davenport, about a dozen homes in Le Claire were evacuated after a breach in a sand dike flooded the area. "We have water in and around them, " said a weary Le Claire public works supervisor John Arndt. Another breach in a separate dike was threatening another eight to 10 homes Tuesday morning, he said. After more than two weeks of battling the flood waters, "everybody getting tired, this has been going on for a while," Arndt said. CNN Correspondents Lilian Kim, Bob Franken and Jeff Flock contributed to this report. RELATED STORIES: Mississippi breaches levee in town near Davenport RELATED SITES:
Federal Emergency Management Agency |
N. Y. plans to heal skyline Stocks rise on Case departure Lieberman's presidential announcement today New arrests may be linked to UK ricin scare (MORE)
Jordan says farewell for the third time Shaq could miss playoff game for child's birth Ex-USOC official says athletes bent drug rules (MORE)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Back to the top |
© 2003 Cable News Network LP, LLLP.
A Time Warner Company. All Rights Reserved. Terms under which this service is provided to you. Read our privacy guidelines. Contact us. |