Flooding Mississippi River Prompts Evacuations, Sandbagging
Communities along the Upper Mississippi River scrambled Wednesday as the always massive river swelled to near record levels, forcing some to be evacuated from their homes while others downstream stacked sandbag walls and closed off flood- prone areas near the waterway.
The river has grown so large because of a huge snowpack in northern Minnesota that began to quickly melt last week due to rising temperatures.
A small number of people had to leave their homes in Wisconsin as the river kept rising. Others were stacking sandbags in the small community of Buffalo, Iowa, in anticipation of flooding this weekend and early next week.
The Mississippi was expected to be especially high along parts of Wisconsin, and crest Wednesday or early Thursday in La Crosse. In Iowa, forecasts predict the river will reach the third-highest level ever recorded when it crests Saturday about 160 miles to the south in Davenport, Iowa.
Improved floodwalls and other temporary measures should prevent significant problems but crews were constantly monitoring the river, officials in the Iowa cities of Dubuque, Davenport and Burlington said. Forecasts call for only a chance of light showers later in the week.
The river already flooded low-lying parks and streets in the city of 50,000 by Wednesday. One of the hardest hit communities has been Campbell, a town of about 4,000 people on French Island that lies in the Mississippi and Black rivers just west of the city.
The far north end of the island is underwater with people being forced to use canoes to reach their homes, Campbell Fire Chief Nate Melby said Wednesday. Pumps supplied by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers are protecting 70 homes on the island’s low-lying south end.
Melby estimated about a half-dozen people have decided to evacuate after the rising waters forced emergency workers to cut power and gas to their homes. Emergency officials have not issued any mandatory evacuation orders, though, he said.
“We’re putting up a good fight,” Melby said. “We’re hanging in there.”
About 60 miles (100 kilometers) downriver at Prairie du Chien, the Mississippi was a little more than 6 feet (1.8 meters) above flood stage Wednesday morning. The water was expected to continue rising each day until Saturday, when it’s expected to crest at just under 25 feet (7 meters). The record high was 25 feet, 3 inches (7.7 meters) set in April 1965.
Video footage shot by WKBT-TV on Tuesday showed water at least a foot deep covering city streets and yards.
Crawford County Emergency Management Specialist Marc Myhre said that some families have evacuated their homes and are staying with other family members but as of Tuesday officials hadn’t issued any mandatory evacuation orders. A message left at the county emergency management offices on Wednesday morning wasn’t immediately returned.
Dubuque, Iowa, crews had closed 13 of the city’s 17 floodgates and had started up four permanent pumping stations and three temporary pumps to suck water over the floodwall and back into the river by Wednesday.
“Now we’ve got to get through the next three or four days of rain but I think we will be in good shape,” Dubuque Public Works Director John Klostermann told the Des Moines Register.
Downstream, officials in Davenport and Bettendorf have closed roads near the river, and Davenport workers had set up temporary sand-filled barriers to protect the city’s downtown. In 2019, barriers failed and allowed water to rush into parts of Davenport’s downtown, but officials said this time the barrier will be much deeper and higher.
In the small riverfront community of Buffalo, Iowa, residents have started building walls of sandbags, wary after significant flooding when the river reached record highs a few years ago.
“What happened in 2019 kind of snuck up on us,” resident Jacob Klaman told the Quad-City Times during a break from stacking sandbags Tuesday. “We are definitely going to be ready this year.”
Top photo: The flooded Mississippi River surrounds the homes on Abel Island near Guttenberg, Iowa, on Tuesday, April 25, 2023. (Stephen Gassman/Telegraph Herald via AP)