NPR, by Laurel Wamsley: Mississippians had been braced for historic floods after days of heavy downpours. When the Pearl River crested in Jackson on Monday [February 17th], the water was 8 feet above flood stage—but that was lower than many had feared.
The river crested at 36.7 feet in the state’s capital city. The full extent of the damage isn’t yet clear, but authorities estimated that up to 1,000 homes in central Mississippi had been flooded.
Jackson resident Yvonne Magee is among those forced to flee because of the waters that now surround her home.
“Really, truly, if it does come in and damage everything in there, I’ll have to start over,” she told the Clarion-Ledger. “I’ll [have] nothing, because everything I got, I own. But I will be grateful because I got me and my kids. I can’t get me and my kids’ [lives] back.”
Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves said in a news conference…that teams had performed 16 search-and-rescue operations since the waters started rising. He thanked residents for following calls to evacuate dangerous areas, keeping first responders out of harm’s way.
“We as a state are not in the clear yet,” Reeves warned. “Do not walk or drive through floodwaters. Turn around, don’t drown. If you were told to evacuate, please heed these orders and do not return until officials have told you it’s safe.”
Jackson resident Shaunta Durr told Mississippi Public Broadcasting that her home had taken on water. Durr and her husband and daughters left on Friday and returned a few days later to take photos of damage to their home.
“Of course I know that it has flooded in,” she said. “I think there’s a possibility of a lot of mold that will settle in. I’m really concerned about the smells.”
The state’s emergency management agency says that even with so many homes affected, its shelter in Jackson housed only 17 people Monday night as most people are staying with relatives. The agency says it will interview affected people to determine their long-term shelter needs.
The high waters hit parts of Tennessee, as well. In the southwest town of Morris Chapel, two homes collapsed after the land beneath them gave way.
“It is a chess match we’re playing with Mother Nature,” Jim Hopson, spokesman for the Tennessee Valley Authority, told The Associated Press. “We have engineers on duty 24-7 trying to figure out what’s the most effective way to move this water downstream with the least impact. They feel it. I feel it.”
Our Comments:
Is it “Mother Nature” or is there another cause for these extreme weather patterns? Could it be that God is seeking to warn people through these calamities?
Prophetic Link:
“In fires, in floods, in earthquakes, in the fury of the great deep, in calamities by sea and by land, the warning is given that God’s Spirit will not always strive with men.” Last Day Events, page 26.
Comments