27 levees could overflow if sandbags fail!
OAKVILLE, Iowa - June 17, 2008 - As southeastern Iowa and
other parts of the Midwest prepared for the Mississippi River's wrath, the rest
of Iowa began the slow move from protection to cleanup.
The federal government predicts that 27 levees could
potentially overflow along the river if the weather forecast is on the mark and
a massive sandbagging effort fails to raise the level of the levees, according
to a map obtained Monday by The Associated Press.
Officials are placing millions of sandbags on top of the
levees in Illinois, Iowa and Missouri to prevent overflowing. There is no way
to predict whether these levees will break, said Ron Fournier, a spokesman with
the Army Corps of Engineers in Iowa.
Six levees have already overflowed in the past three days:
two in Iowa and four in Missouri.
In much of Iowa, there were small signs of a return to
normalcy: Interstate 80 reopened near Iowa City for the first time in days,
with Interstate 380 to the north scheduled to reopen early Tuesday. On the
University of Iowa campus, officials began to take stock of the damage.
And in Des Moines, where a levee failure Saturday sent
water pouring into the Birdland neighborhood, some residents returned for the first
time to see the damage.
"It's really bad. I mean, I can't believe this,"
said Gloria Ruiz, whose home suffered flood damage.
Ruiz pointed to a dirty line about 5 feet up on her
basement wall showing how high the water rose. Her washer, dryer and boiler,
and most of her children's toys, including a stereo and an Xbox video game
system, were ruined.
Floodwaters lingered about 50 feet from her driveway.
Where floodwaters remained, they were a noxious brew of
sewage, farm chemicals and fuel. Bob Lanz used a 22-foot aluminum flatboat to
navigate through downtown Oakville, where the water reeked of pig feces and
diesel fuel.
"You can hardly stand it," Lanz said as he
surveyed what remained of his family's hog farm. "It's strong."
LeRoy Lippert, chairman of emergency management and
homeland security in nearby Des Moines County, warned people to avoid the
floodwaters: "If you drink this water and live, tell me about it. You have
no idea. It is very, very wise to stay out of it. It's as dangerous as anything."
Gov. Chet Culver and others
pointed to the next looming trouble spot, in southeastern Iowa. Most requests
for state aid were coming from Des Moines County, where the Mississippi River
was expected to crest Tuesday evening at 26 feet in a mostly rural area near
Burlington. Early Tuesday, the river was at 25.7 feet - more than 10 feet above
flood stage - and still rising.