Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Flooding Thoughts







Our levees have broken. The river is seeping into the freshly-planted fields. One of my dear friends commented this morning, "You'd think it would gush and come in with a huge flood. Instead, it just quietly seeps. A few hours later and parts of the field have little lakes." She also later said, "You just sit there and watch your year's income soak away." Her husband is a commissioner with the Lima Lake Drainage District. That levee failed at 1 am today. He came home at 3:30 am and left again at 6:30 am within the past 18 hours. These pictures were taken with my camera phone atop a bluff in Riverview Park about 7 am today. We heard on WGEM-AM radio that the Indian Graves Drainage District levee failed at 6 am. It's thought that the levee break is a quarter-mile wide. National media has shown videos of that break throughout the day.

When we returned from vacation last Saturday, we were shocked by how high the river was. The national media wasn't doing anything with coverage. We had no clue how bad it was. Apparently sand-bagging started in earnest Friday, June 13. Officials closed our oldest Mississippi River bridge at midnight on Saturday, June 14. The approach is rather low. Our other bridge was built from Illinois levee to Missouri levee. However, if the Missouri levee breaks, then the bridge is of no use for that road is not above flood stage. Ironic, huh? But we would not be completely cut off from the world - after all, this is western Illinois. There's a road network to the north, east and south.

My 6-year-old was concerned the flood was going to "hurt us" and "carry us away." I had a difficult time calming him. I reminded him again and again that our town sits high on the bluffs; that the river is only spilling over little breaks into the low ground beside it. I need to find out how high the bluffs are. He was also concerned that the crest will be 32.2 feet (ties the 1993 flood record). He's only 54 inches.

There are different reports about when the "crest" will arrive. The crest is the highest point the water level will be (in simple terms). You can follow the crest as it passes through official water level markers along the Mississippi River. On Monday it was reported we'd get a crest of 31.9 feet on Friday, June 20. Tuesday, the crest forecast was 32 feet on Thursday, June 19. Today the prediction is 32.2 feet on Thursday, June 19. The height would tie the 1993 record set. Ironically, with a levee break, pressure is taken off other levees. It also drops the river's water level. Overnight our town's river level dropped from 30.8 feet to 30.4 feet.

During the 1993 Flood, I threw sandbags on the Sny Levee in southern Adams county. It was hot, sweaty, buggy work - nasty flies and gnats. This time the weather is cooler, but, I have young children. Though I know I'm doing the right thing keeping them occupied, I still have guilty-pangs about doing more. The older child might actually enjoy helping, but the 3-year-old is a handful. He'd only get in the way. One of my friends took her 3-year-old, 5-year-old and 7-year-old to fill sandbags. She said the 3-year-old was running all over the place; playing King of the Mountain on the big sand dunes from which they get the sand to shovel in the bags. I was told this morning they've asked people with little children to please stay away from the bagging sites. My husband and his friends went down and sandbagged for a few hours after work today until the site closed.

It wasn't until Cedar Rapids, Iowa, flooded that it seemed the national media diverted its attention to the Mississippi River. Now our town is crawling with helicopters, small planes, plus lots of rental cars from St. Louis, Missouri, etc.

The funny thing is the comments we're getting from friends not in the area: "Wow the National Guard is in your town. Does this mean you're in trouble?" "How close is it?" Luckily most of them remember what we told them 15 years ago (about the town is high on the bluff). This time, however, officials are really concerned about the city's water treatment plant, which is at the river's edge. It remained unscathed during the last flood. They are praying it stays for this one, too. A large sandbag pile has been built to protect it. Officials are cautioning people to stock a little water, just in case.

Furthermore, law enforcement officials are now guarding the levees for unintentional or potential sabotage. I can't believe some idiots are actually toiling around walking around on top of the levees "sight-seeing." Come on people! Don't add more stress to the poor earthen mounds topped with white plastic sandbags.
There's many good volunteers helping in addition to sandbagging. The Salvation Army is feeding and providing water for the volunteers. The Quincy Humane Society has opened extra branches to shelter people's pets (and I think some livestock) when people are evacuated from their homes.

And then there's the icky, smelly, mucky clean-up...but that's for another time.

**I apologize for any inaccuracies. If you find some, please tell me.

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