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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Widespread flooding hits the US Midwest
By Naomi Spencer
21 March 2008
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Torrential rains have triggered flash flooding throughout the
US Midwest and central states, causing at least 13 deaths in the
region. At this writing, several more people are missing, hundreds
are sleeping in makeshift evacuation shelters, and thousands of
homes have been flooded.
Thousands of travelers were stranded at airports after hundreds
of planes were grounded. Breached levees and power outages have
crippled many communities.
The developments are unfortunately familiar. Severe weather
events associated with climate change have struck Missouri, Illinois,
Kentucky, Indiana, and Ohio repeatedly in the past year. The impact
of the flooding, anticipated to break historic records in many
areas, has been augmented by the decayed state of public infrastructure
and lack of local resources.
For example, Findlay, Ohio, the site of catastrophic flooding
in August, once again faces inundation by the Blanchard River,
which has exceeded its 11-foot flood level for the tenth time
in just over a year.
Southeast Missouri and southern Illinois received nearly a
foot of rain in less than two days. Because the ground is already
saturated from a series of damaging ice storms and unprecedented
precipitation, water has overwhelmed natural and manmade drainage
mechanisms. Even miles from riverbanks, wide swaths of cropland
are under water that laps at the edges of highways. Where water
has receded, this reporter found roads covered in mud and debris,
and in some areas literally breaking apart.
Although the storm system has passed, the National Weather
Service has warned that flooding will expand until as late as
Tuesday. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has
warned that more than 250 towns and cities across a dozen states
face floods.
Along the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers, as well as along other
tributary rivers in the region, townspeople have had to hastily
fortify levees, using stones, loose gravel, and bags filled with
mud. Some small river towns, facing the possibility of 10- to
20-foot surges by Sunday as water makes its way downstream, have
begun evacuating nursing homes and hospitals.
On Wednesday night, 70 Missouri counties plus the city of St.
Louis were declared major disaster areas and authorized
to receive federal assistance. As of this writing, federal agencies
have not issued specific guarantees for aid or begun recovery
operations beyond pledging to deliver bottled water to the Missouri
city of Piedmont.
The Associated Press quoted Doug LeComte, meteorologist at
the federal Climate Prediction Center as saying that the level
of moisture is unprecedented for this time of year over
an area that extends over 1,000 miles. He said that the
La Nina weather pattern often leads to increased precipitation,
but whats happened in the last few months has not
been a typical La Nina, the jet streams been on steroids.
The past several years have seen a rapid erosion of the economy
and living standards of Midwesterners. Jobs have been ruthlessly
cut and industry gutted, leaving working families with low wages
and towns impoverished. When disaster strikes, thousands of families
have no back-up plan or insurance coverage.
Compounding this, many National Guard units from the Midwest
that could be providing essential manpower in levee fortification
efforts are instead occupying Iraq and Afghanistan. Local rescue
teams are overwhelmed, underequipped, increasingly dependent on
volunteers and donations, and frequently among the victims in
disaster areas.
At all levels of government, years of tax cuts and business
incentives have diverted funding for basic upkeep of roads, sewage
systems, and emergency management into the coffers of the rich.
Now, facing the distinct possibility of an economic depression,
state and local governments have no means of instituting public
works programs, emergency reconstruction efforts, or even simple
road and sewer upkeep.
According to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, 22
states have a collective budget shortfall of at least $37 billion,
and the National Governors Association estimates that at least
a dozen other state governments may similarly face shortfalls
next year. The shortfall is similar to the levels faced going
into the 2001 recession, but the deterioration of public infrastructure
has advanced markedly since that time.
When budgets have come up short over the past few years, social
infrastructure funding has consistently been among the first areas
cut. According to the American Society of Civil Engineers, at
least $1.6 trillion is needed to fix outstanding problems in the
countrys critical infrastructureroads, dams, sewers,
and bridges. This is without taking into account future population
growth, let alone complications and dangers posed by climate change.
Many state and local governments have already carved up and
sold off public infrastructure, including roadways, water and
sewage systems. In the hands of private entities with no interest
but profit, infrastructure is left to crumble.
See Also:
Ohio floods: another
example of Americas failing infrastructure
[28 August 2007]
Flooding displaces
thousands in US Midwest
[25 August 2007]
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