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WSWS : News
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America
Flooding displaces thousands in US Midwest
By Naomi Spencer
25 August 2007
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Severe storms and flooding throughout the central US Plains
and Midwest have displaced thousands of people and left hundreds
of thousands without power. At least 26 deaths have been attributed
to two storm systems that moved through the area in the past week.
Emergencies were declared in five states in the upper Midwest
and Plains states. Heavy flooding has damaged or destroyed at
least 6,000 homes throughout Iowa, Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana,
and Ohiostates not historically known for flood problems.
Consequently, many residences were not insured for flood damage.
In flood-stricken southwest Wisconsin, for example, only 5 to
10 percent of homeowners, about 1,400, had flood insurance.
Flooding was so severe in Findlay, Ohio, after the Blanchard
River rose 7 feet above flood stage that at least 500 residents
were forced to evacuate and hundreds sought sanctuary in emergency
shelters. A 92-year-old man died Thursday when he tried to escape
his car that had become partially submerged in water.
Ohio Governor Ted Strickland declared a state of emergency
on Wednesday in 9 of 21 Ohio counties, in what is now being referred
to as The Flood of 2007. Extensive damage was done
to residences, public buildings and businesses. Agricultural crops,
a crucial segment of the regional economy, are expected to sustain
widespread damage.
On Friday, some downtown streets in Findlay remained navigable
only by boat, and owners of businesses and shops began the painstaking
task of cleaning up the damage. Water had become mixed with sewage
and petroleum products and left behind a filthy residue. The City
Council has appropriated $500,000 for cleanup efforts.
Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, who arrived in
Findlay to assess the damage, commented, The damage here
is on a scale I dont think anybody expected. And preventing
it is the best way to deal with it. Engineering takes time, and
we want it to be done the right way. But certainly we want to
see these issues addressed as quickly as possible.
As with the recent bridge collapse in Minnesota, Bush administration
officials have sought to respond publicly and more rapidly, sensitive
to the populations growing hostility to the governments
record of indifference to such tragedies.
US Rep. Marcy Kaptur (Democrat of Toledo, Ohio), speaking at
a recreation center being used as a shelter, said that the floods
that have damaged the area could have been prevented. She blamed
the US Army Corps of Engineers for dragging its feet.
In southern Minnesota, preliminary damage reports from the
American Red Cross estimate 4,200 homes were damaged in flooding
and mudslides. President Bush declared three counties major disaster
areas there, making FEMA funds available to flood victims.
On August 23, a powerful storm struck the Chicago area with
high winds, heavy rain and tornado conditions near the citys
evening rush hour. Road and rail traffic were paralyzed for hours.
No sirens were sounded in the city because, according to city
officials, the National Weather Service told them there was no
immediate danger.
In one west Chicago suburb, 40 people were injured when the
roof of a two-story brick warehouse collapsed. Lightning struck
the roof of a juvenile detention facility, causing a fire and
forcing the evacuation of 36 prisoners. Chicagos WMAQ television
reported the citys 9-1-1 and 3-1-1 emergency services received
more than one call every second during the storm.
Well over 300,000 Chicago-area residents lost power, and according
to utility ComEd, over 230,000 homes and businesses remained without
electricity on Friday, mostly on the north side of the city. The
two major Chicago airports also lost power Thursday night. At
OHare International Airport, one of the largest hubs in
the world, around 500 flights out of the city were cancelled and
delays averaged two-and-a-half hours for in- and outbound flights.
Aerial footage from Chicagos WGN Channel 9 traffic helicopter
showed some neighborhoods nearly entirely submerged as of Friday.
Surveys of Indiana revealed similar conditions, with sections
of Interstate 80/94 submerged. 30,000 residents in Indiana and
100,000 in Michigan were left without power.
Intentionally or not, virtually all reports belie the lack
of government preparation for such a disaster. Countless exhausted
local law enforcement and volunteer rescuers are put before network
cameras to convey their anxieties.
A WGN 9 report from Des Plaines, Illinois, included interviews
with local residents who were sandbagging around their already
flooded neighborhoods just blocks away from a partially erected
but apparently abandoned flood barrier begun by the state. The
Des Plaines River, which is already six feet above flood stage,
is not expected to crest until next Wednesday. More rain is expected
to hit the area over the weekend.
Chicago WMAQ television visited one subdivision surrounded
by a moat of floodwater attempting to stave off flooding with
a sump pump and a garden hose.
ABC News footage from Racine, Wisconsin, showed tons of ruined
personal effects piled up at the curb and in dumpsters. Still
unreal, one resident told the reporter as she cleaned, depressing
that everything weve worked for for the past six years is
in the dumpster now.
ABC also aired footage from Gurnee, Illinois, of young children
and their parents laboriously shoveling sand into bags for fortifications
to protect the local school. We need this building,
a local resident said. It has to open next week. Weve
got 400-plus kids in this building. Theres no other place
to put them.
Such scenes epitomize the massive diversion of social resources
that has steadily, but not always obviously, undercut Americas
safety net in the past several years. Given the severity of the
flooding, the very limited response of the Federal Emergency Management
Agency is especially significant. People feel, quite legitimately,
that it is sink or swim.
Particularly in the Midwest, years of manufacturing job cuts
have worn down communities and crippled the ability of individual
families to cope with difficulties. Tax cuts and business handouts
have siphoned away state funding for stocks of emergency supplies
and reconstruction efforts.
And the war in Iraq has stripped the region not only of funds
but also of the manpower National Guard units could provide in
terms of rescue and repair. The full effect of this depletion
of resources will undoubtedly become more evident as communities
and families begin the recovery process. The Bush administrations
handling of Hurricane Katrina in 2005 has had echoes in every
natural disaster since.
See Also:
Dozens missing, four confirmed dead in
Minnesota bridge collapse
[2 August 2007]
New York City: steam pipe
blast kills 1, injures dozens
[20 July 2007]
Hurricane Katrina
disaster shows the failure of the profit system
[6 September 2005]
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