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- <text id=93TT0235>
- <link 93TO0113>
- <title>
- July 26, 1993: Flood, Sweat and Tears
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- July 26, 1993 The Flood Of '93
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER, Page 22
- DISASTERS
- Flood, Sweat and Tears
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Driven by incessant, violent rains, a monster deluge tears a
- watery swath from Minnesota to Missouri
- </p>
- <p>By GEORGE J. CHURCH--With reporting by Jon D. Hull/St. Charles, Staci D. Kramer/St.
- Louis, J. Madeleine Nash/Chicago and Elizabeth Taylor/Des Moines
- </p>
- <p> The worst is supposed to be over this weekend. The flood crest
- on the Mississippi, 46 ft. above normal (and 3 ft. above the
- highest ever recorded before), was scheduled to pass St. Louis,
- Missouri, on Monday. It should roll by Cairo, Illinois, about
- 180 miles to the south, by Friday. There, the Ohio joins the
- Mississippi, which moves into a broader, deeper channel that
- should be able to carall the water pouring in from upstream
- without overflowing the levees, dikes and dams south of Cairo.
- The people, businesses and farms lining the Father of Waters
- for the roughly 600 miles south to New Orleans should be safe.
- Upstream, houses, roads and fields should begin to resurface
- above the new lakes and inland seas covering parts of nine states
- inundated by the Mississippi, the Missouri and tributary rivers,
- streams and creeks that nobody outside the immediate area had
- ever heard of before last week.
- </p>
- <p> If. But. Only.
- </p>
- <p> If...sunshine finally puts an end to the rains that have
- been lashing the upper Midwest and swelling the rivers for the
- past three months, in amounts often difficult to believe (an
- inch in only six minutes last week at Papillion, Nebraska).
- Otherwise the crest could be even higher than predicted; continued
- rain caused forecasts of the expected maximum height at St.
- Louis to be raised a full foot within two days late last week.
- On Saturday, thunderstorms dropped an additional 5 in. of rain
- on central Iowa. A dangerous second crest could chase the big
- one down the Mississippi, and secondary rivers could burst their
- banks in areas so far spared. That happened last Thursday night
- in Fargo, North Dakota. The Red River, engorged by a daylong
- deluge, rose 4 ft. in six hours, rampaging into town and causing
- sewage to back up into homes and Dakota Hospital.
- </p>
- <p> Another if: more levees, soaked and pounded by rushing waters
- for weeks, could give way as the crest approaches or even after
- it passes. Early last Friday morning the Missouri River poured
- over the top of a railroad embankment being used as a levee
- in St. Charles County, Missouri, northwest of St. Louis. Its
- waters mingled with those swirling south from the Mississippi
- 20 miles sooner than usual, forcing several hundred people to
- join the 7,000 who had already evacuated. Then, Friday night,
- the Mississippi broke though a sand levee at West Quincy, Missouri,
- forcing closing of the Bayview Bridge about a quarter-mile away--the last span that was open over a 200-mile stretch of the
- river where it flows between Missouri and Illinois. The bridge
- will be closed for weeks, whatever happens, an indication that
- worse may yet come before the worst is over.
- </p>
- <p> But...even with few or no additions, the Great Flood of
- '93 is already one of the all-time monsters. It might go down
- as the worst of all in the U.S. by many measures: height of
- flood crest, area inundated (close to 17,000 sq. mi., vs. 12,700
- in the awesome flood of 1937 along many of the same rivers)
- and property damage. Government estimates skyrocketed in little
- more than a week from $500 million to as much as $8 billion,
- and the final tally might be higher still.
- </p>
- <p> The big exception: the death toll, 26 late last week, was only
- a hair above the 23 killed by the mammoth flood of 1973 in many
- of the same areas, and only a tenth of the 250 who perished
- in the 1937 flood--to say nothing of the record 2,100 drowned
- on the single day of May 31, 1889, in Johnstown, Pennsylvania.
- Main reasons: abundant warnings, evacuation plans well worked
- out in advance, the lack of flash floods and above all the fact
- that over the years most population centers have been protected
- by levees and dams built high and strong enough to hold against
- the pounding of a once-in-a-century flood. Hold they did: with
- few exceptions, the cities flooded were those protected only
- by privately built levees that were not well constructed. The
- waters that flooded agricultural land mostly broke through or
- swept over levees not as tall as those guarding the cities.
- </p>
- <p> Only...statistics, and even the view from rooftop level,
- give little idea of the sheer extent of inundation. That can
- really be glimpsed only from the air, as by the crew of a U.S.
- Coast Guard Dolphin helicopter that flew over the St. Louis
- area last week to survey the damage and scout places where it
- might later land to evacuate flood victims. The seemingly endless
- expanse of water made visual navigation difficult by submerging
- the landmarks pilots usually look for. Long stretches of highway
- and railroad tracks were invisible; river islands had disappeared;
- the river channels themselves could not be distinguished from
- the water that had spread onto once dry land. Mountains of strip-mined
- coal that usually glisten in the sun south of St. Louis poked
- only their very tips above the water. At the Kirkwood Athletic
- Association complex in Kirkwood, Missouri, only the dugout roofs
- could be seen above the water covering baseball diamonds, and
- a nearby golf course looked like a series of small green islands
- lost in a sea. At the Shrine of Our Lady of the Rivers in St.
- Charles County, a statue of the Virgin Mary appeared to be dancing
- on the waves.
- </p>
- <p> Even if the rain and flooding stop completely now, it may take
- a month in some areas for all that water to flow back into the
- rivers, through the levees it came around or over. (Yes, through.
- The water might go back through holes eroded in the levees or
- through gravity drains that are closed during floods but reopened
- to allow a backflow into the river.) Then comes the monumental
- task of cleanup. The receding waters will leave behind all manner
- of wreckage. Examples: the floating chicken coops and broken
- tree branches Paul Rice has to steer his flat-bottomed boat
- past to reach his submerged home in St. Charles County. Or the
- lumber, three ice chests and four plastic garbage cans he has
- plucked from the waters around his house and placed on his roof--still a foot above the waterline. In some areas, agricultural
- chemicals and human and animal wastes will be mixed with the
- debris. And of course, mud--tons and tons and tons of mud.
- </p>
- <p> While throwing sandbag on top of sandbag on top of sandbag to
- erect makeshift barriers against the water, some people nonetheless
- wondered what could be done with all that sand--or, for that
- matter, the bags--once the waters subside. The Army Corps
- of Engineers calculates that it has distributed 26.5 million
- bags through the flood area, and each has been filled with roughly
- 35 lbs. of sand; they can't just be left in piles all over the
- place.
- </p>
- <p> Piling up the bags has been good therapy for people eager to
- do something to combat the floods while keeping their minds
- off their losses. "All we can do is sandbag," said John Boerding,
- 50, who figured that more than half his 2,000-acre crop of soybeans,
- corn and wheat in St. Charles County had already been destroyed
- by late last week, and was worried that his home would sink
- as well. "What else can we do? Most people in this area don't
- even have flood insurance." But even if there are no outbreaks
- of disease because of the filth in the waters, the Midwest will
- shortly be suffering one of the world's worst collective backaches
- from the unaccustomed labor of filling the bags and muscling
- them into place.
- </p>
- <p> Elizabeth Smith, assistant professor of psychiatry at Washington
- University in St. Louis, who has done extensive research into
- the psychological effects of disasters, expects emotional as
- well as physical pain among flood survivors. Many, she notes,
- have been under stress for weeks, since flooding started in
- some areas as far back as April. People who go through that,
- Smith notes, react in a different way from those who survive
- one-shot traumas like fires or plane crashes: they do not experience
- flashbacks to the disaster or extreme jumpiness but instead
- suffer prolonged "depression, sadness and feelings of hopelessness."
- She adds that even people who were only near, not in, the floods
- may feel a new sense of vulnerability.
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps, but in the middle of the disaster Midwesterners showed
- a stunning good humor, resilience and neighborly spirit. It
- was especially notable in the Iowa capital, Des Moines, which
- was hit possibly harder than any other big city. A flood along
- the Raccoon River at the beginning of last week knocked out
- the city's water-treatment plant. Officials expect to send water
- for bathing and flushing toilets coursing through the pipes
- again this week, but there will be no running water safe to
- drink for an additional three weeks or so. Meanwhile, residents
- seeking water for any purpose last week had to line up for supplies
- trucked in from outside and dispensed at 100 different locations
- (limit: 2 gal. to a customer); they were forbidden to enter
- office buildings because sprinkler systems could not protect
- them from fire. Downtown at times looked like a city under military
- occupation: deserted except for National Guardsmen who patrolled
- the streets while helicopters buzzed overhead. President Clinton,
- who toured flooded areas many times during his 12 years as Governor
- of Arkansas, flew in Wednesday and declared, "I've never seen
- anything on this scale before."
- </p>
- <p> Yet as a chain of about 100 people heaved sandbags to protect
- the water-treatment plant in West Des Moines from further flooding,
- the atmosphere was downright festive. Jokes flew (most popular:
- the state motto, "Iowa--A Place to Grow," should be changed
- to "Iowa--A Place to Row"). Valerie Kenworthy, 15, explained
- her presence: the scene "looked cool on TV so I came down."
- At Iowa Methodist Medical Center, the only designated trauma
- center serving the city, president David Ramsey explained why
- trauma cases are actually down: "People are helping out and
- are not out on motorcycles drinking beer and acting crazy."
- Hospital workers were busy carrying buckets of water for patients.
- "Our arms are six inches longer," joked emergency-room manager
- Linda Shoemaker. "We carry buckets here and go home and carry
- more." Lining up for water at a Des Moines parking lot, Donna
- Bailey was upbeat in describing her family's coping strategy:
- "Every surface is covered with bowls of water. And we flush
- the toilets with rainwater we keep in the bathtub." Doug Riggs,
- on vacation from his job as a social worker in Marshalltown,
- drove 75 miles into Des Moines to help out and found himself
- managing a shelter at Shepherd of the Valley Lutheran Church.
- But at week's end only 25 flooded-out people had arrived; many
- more had found family, friends or neighbors to take them in.
- </p>
- <p> Downriver the story was the same. Mayor Chuck Scholz of Quincy,
- Illinois, was startled and touched to find two girls who looked
- to be a mere eight to 10 years old clutching shovels and waiting
- to board a bus carrying volunteers to work at a nearby sandbagging
- site. At Ste. Genevieve, Missouri, south of St. Louis, volunteer
- inmates from the Farmington Correctional Center heaved sandbags
- side by side with people from the neighborhood. "Man, these
- guys can throw sandbags like you wouldn't believe!" marveled
- Gerald Basler, a highway-maintenance worker. "Some of these
- guys can catch them in midair with one hand!" Ken Novak, who
- is serving eight years for first-degree assault, showed a reciprocal
- friendliness. "We had one lady who had tears in her eyes, she
- was so happy to see guys from prison coming to help," Novak
- related. "I told her my shoulder was clean and I'd give it to
- her to cry on."
- </p>
- <p> There will be more tears later, and not of joy or friendliness,
- as the damages mount. Already, amid the determined good cheer,
- there are those like Mike Johnson who curse the river, the skies,
- the dams and levees upstream (for holding altogether too well
- and increasing pressure downriver), and the government. Mike,
- an out-of-work machine operator, and his wife Roberta and three
- children were ordered out of their two-story brick house in
- the St. Louis suburb of Lemay on July 9 at 3:30 a.m. Every day
- since, Mike has returned to the house in a neighbor's boat to
- inspect it; late last week 6 ft. of water sloshed around the
- living room. The family, plus two Chow show dogs and two Persian
- cats, is living in Mike's blue 1992 Bronco; Mike sleeps on the
- roof. Nearby, the roof of the family's second car, a 1977 Cutlass,
- is barely visible above the water. "It's a goner," says Mike.
- </p>
- <p> The Rooney brothers live only a few dozen yards away from each
- other in St. Charles County, but the Great Flood is treating
- them quite differently. Walter Rooney's three-story house sits
- in 11 ft. of water, yet Rooney, 64, is able to pop a cold beer
- from the fridge, kick back in his air-conditioned second-story
- sitting room and listen to music, all thanks to a power line
- that hasn't been turned off. His brother Ray, 60, isn't so fortunate.
- "That's my house over there," he says, pointing to a blue roof
- just above the waterline. "I left my house in the 1973 flood,
- and they stole everything I had. There's no way I'm leaving
- this time." So he sits on Walter's second-story porch, just
- 1 ft. above the Mississippi, and watches debris from Minnesota
- and Wisconsin, Iowa and Illinois float by. "If it looks interesting,
- I'll grab it," he says.
- </p>
- <p> Despite stunning TV pictures of flooded city streets, though,
- most of the inundation has affected thinly populated farmland.
- For example, the 7,000 people evacuated last week from the 40%
- of St. Charles County that was expected to be underwater shortly
- contrasted with 55,000 residents of the city of St. Charles
- who sat high and, so far, dry on elevated land.
- </p>
- <p> But--there always seems to be a but--much of the drowned
- farmland is normally among the most fertile acreage on earth,
- and prospective crop losses are spectacular: $1.5 billion worth
- of soybeans in Illinois; $1 billion of corn in Iowa. "There
- is still time to recover," says Victor Lespinasse, a Dean Witter
- grain analyst in Chicago. "But none of us is ever going to forget
- how the rains came in the summer for the first time, out of
- nowhere. And we will never feel the same about our place on
- earth." He is referring to the flood's menacing peculiarity.
- It is an anomaly in the Mississippi basin that it came in July,
- giving farmers less time to recover than previous inundations,
- which almost always came in late winter or early spring. Summers
- in the area are usually noted for searing heat and Saharan drought
- rather than for rains on which Noah's ark might float.
- </p>
- <p> Suffering and losses may be eased this time because the Federal
- Emergency Management Agency is moving with uncharacteristic
- speed and vigor. From its creation 14 years ago right through
- Hurricane Andrew in Florida last summer, FEMA built a reputation
- for bumble-footed sluggishness. Democratic Senator Ernest Hollings
- once called its officials "the sorriest bunch of bureaucratic
- jackasses." Under a new administrator, James Lee Witt, however,
- FEMA has moved quickly to set up offices in at least eight flooded
- states. Regional staffs actually went into some areas before
- flooding became serious to help state officials apply for disaster
- assistance. Witt has since started a daily morning conference
- call with state emergency managers and directed FEMA workers
- to respond immediately to state requests--indeed, not to wait
- until asked but to approach state officials with lists of things
- that the agency thinks might be needed and that it can supply,
- such as the water-purification equipment that was delivered
- to a hospital in Des Moines within 24 hours.
- </p>
- <p> Bill Clinton has also been trying to move fast. Last Wednesday
- he cut short a Hawaiian vacation to fly to Des Moines, where
- someone along his motorcade route held up a sign reading ALOHA,
- BILL. WELCOME TO THE OTHER BIG ISLAND. The President announced
- that he will ask Congress to put up an additional $2.5 billion
- for flood relief, which will have to be borrowed and will add
- to the budget deficit. On Saturday, he returned to the area
- with nearly half his Cabinet to talk about the region's needs,
- and promised to send federal troops if necessary. Clinton is
- determined not to get caught in the same bind as George Bush,
- who reacted slowly to hurricanes in Florida, Hawaii and South
- Carolina and got himself blamed not only for failing to relieve
- suffering but also for slowing economic recovery in those areas.
- But the President and his aides insisted that Washington could
- not make up flood losses dollar for dollar: states, local governments,
- private charities and the victims themselves will have to bear
- much of the cost. Said Chris Edley Jr., a program associate
- director for the Office of Management and Budget: "For farmers,
- the point is to make sure that it's not a disastrous year. The
- object is to get them through the crisis, not make them whole."
- </p>
- <p> Even before the rains stopped and the rivers crested, a debate
- was breaking out about how to handle the next flood. "There
- are two extremes," observed Brigadier General Stanley Genega,
- director of civil works for the Corps of Engineers. "There are
- the folks who say we ought to remove everything from the banks
- of the rivers and let nature take its course. On the other extreme
- are folks who urge us to line the river with levees and control
- the whole thing. The real answer is, there has to be some balance."
- An unexceptionable sentiment, no doubt--but where to strike
- that balance? Should the levees that gave way be rebuilt and
- made higher? Or should they be left alone, on the assumption
- that they give people living behind them a false sense of security,
- and emphasis be shifted to waterproofing buildings and moving
- them to higher ground? In theory, it might be advisable to try
- to discourage people from building or farming on floodplains--but how, given that they are very fertile and scenic?
- </p>
- <p> The debate is all the more vexing because it involves trying
- to outguess Mother Nature--a futile endeavor, as evidenced
- by the wild unlikelihood of devastating rain in July, which
- nonetheless happened. The consistent pattern of late 20th century
- flooding in the U.S. has been a decline in deaths proportionate
- to the area inundated, but a startling rise in property damage,
- due to increased building and farming on the floodplains and
- inflation in dollar values. Beyond that, all is as uncertain
- as the exact height of the flood crest and the precise time
- it will pass St. Louis. A 1955 book, A Treasury of Mississippi
- River Folklore, quotes an obscure orator, one S.S. Prentiss,
- as saying, "When God made the world, He had a large amount of
- surplus water which he turned loose and told to go where it
- pleased; it has been going where it pleased ever since and that
- is the Mississippi River." No doubt it will continue to go pretty
- much where it pleases for centuries to come.
- </p>
- <p>THE EXTENT OF THE DAMAGE
- </p>
- <p> The flood has killed at least 26 people, caused an estimated
- $8 billion in damage and covered over 10 million acres. Clinton
- declared more than 200 counties federal disaster areas, including
- all 99 counties in Iowa.
- </p>
- <p> The Mississippi River drainage basin covers over 1,250,000 sq.
- mi., collects water from 40% of the contiguous U.S. and dumps
- 100 trillion gal. of water into the Gulf of Mexico.
- </p>
- <p> The Missouri River broke through a levee near St. Charles on
- July 16. Floodwaters surged northward, merging with Mississippi
- backwaters 20 miles upstream from their normal confluence.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-