AP Interactives: Southern states deal with aftermath of flooding from storms

Florida starts cleanup amid receding floodwaters

PENSACOLA, Fla. - As Florida Panhandle residents and business owners started the long process Thursday of cleaning up as flood waters receded, a food pantry with no space to store canned goods begged donors to give money instead.

Manna Food Pantries, the primary food pantry in the Pensacola area, may be a total loss after 3 feet of water flooded food coolers and administrative offices. It can't accept new food donations because it has nowhere to store them, said Executive Director DeDe Flounlacker.

"If you were thinking of giving a can of food, give $5 instead," Flounlacker told the Pensacola News-Journal. "It's about as bad as it can be. Nobody got hurt, though, and we're glad for that."

Nearly 2 feet of rain drenched Escambia and Santa Rosa counties in the span of about 24 hours. Officials assessing the damage Thursday said they were exploring whether to have both counties declared disaster zones.

Burst water pipes in Gulf Breeze compounded flooding from the rain, and receding waters exposed buckled roadways. About 660 Gulf Power customers remained without power Thursday morning.

A boil water notice remained in effect for parts of Pensacola along Escambia Bay. The Emerald Coast Utilities Authority lost three service trucks in the flooding, including one that maintenance workers used to help free a woman trapped in her car, said executive director Stephen E. Sorrell.

photo A home remains in water despite receding flood waters, Thursday, May 1, 2014, in Gulf Breeze, Fla.

Kyle Schmitz returned to his Pensacola home Thursday to find a dark brown line ringing the exterior, marking how high the water rose after he fled Tuesday night with his 18-month-old son. He was packing clothes, dishes and books that had stayed dry on high shelves, but larger, soaked pieces of furniture such as his bed and couch were destined to be left at the curb.

Schmitz told his landlords that he'd have to find somewhere else to live.

"It's pretty obvious I'm not coming back to this house," he said. "I told them, 'Rent's due today, it's the first of the month, but I'm not going to pay that.' They said, 'We get that.'"

In Washington County, Bridgette Phillips' husband had to kayak from the road to the front door of their Greenhead home to assess the damage.

They don't live near a creek or reservoir, but the neighborhood has poor drainage. Their yard had been completely submerged by the flooding. Without anywhere else to go, the water seeped into their home.

"There was 2 feet of water in the house. It was coming up through the floors," Phillips said. "It's horrible."

A woman who died when she drove her car into high water was identified as a retired school district employee. The Florida Highway Patrol says Betty Faye Word drowned Wednesday when her Mercedes was submerged by floodwaters just north of Pensacola.

The system that had blown violent winds across parts of Tennessee and Mississippi early this week and then soaked the Panhandle continued to move east Thursday. It brought rain and some flooding to cities in the Mid-Atlantic region and along the East Coast, but nothing as severe as what residents in the Panhandle and Alabama's Gulf Coast saw.

The storm system caused flooding in other areas as it moved up the East Coast. Heavy rains overflowed rivers and creeks in the places including Washington area, Ohio, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Roads were closed across the region, and several people had to be rescued from waterlogged homes and cars. Commuter train service was also interrupted.

In Bay County, Florida, officials warned residents that even though the rains had passed, high water levels in lakes, rivers and reservoirs were straining flood control measures and that more flooding and runoff may be possible.

"We're doing everything we possibly can," County Commission Chairman Guy Tunnell told The News Herald. "It's a situation where folks have to use common sense and look out for dangerous situations."

Officials across the Panhandle compared the rains to a hurricane - one they hadn't had time to prepare for.

"I'm gathering the wood to build an ark," Walton County Sheriff Mike Adkinson told the Northwest Florida Daily Newsas he assessed the damage.

State still mopping up after 2 feet of rain

photo In Foley, Alabama, some people couldn't get out of their homes on Wednesday, April 30, 2014, after floodwaters surrounded their homes, many of which are built on stilts.

MONTGOMERY, Ala. - As a weekend with little rain in the forecast approached, residents in many parts of Alabama were still clearing debris and assessing damage after more than two feet of rain fell in some areas in a two-day span, according to radar estimates.

The storms also brought ferocious winds and possible tornadoes to some areas.

National Weather Service crews on Thursday were surveying several areas in Alabama to determine whether tornadoes touched down. Forecasters said they expected to release more details on possible tornadoes by Thursday night.

Some of the heaviest two-day rainfall totals for Tuesday and Wednesday ranged from 22 inches to 26 inches over Perdido Bay, Wolf Bay, Foley and Orange Beach, based on National Weather Service radar estimates, Al.com reported. The deluge led to serious flooding along the Gulf Coast. Authorities said there were at least 30 rescues in the Mobile area.

Capt. David Spies of Fish River/Marlow Fire and Rescue said he was part of a team that found two women and a young boy trapped in the attic of a modular home. Spies said the first call for help came before midnight Tuesday but the three weren't found until about 8 a.m. Wednesday. By then, the water was 2 feet below the roof. A firefighter used an axe to punch a hole through the roof and free them.

"They were very scared, they were very upset," Spies said.

The saturated soil was also creating severe delays for farmers.

Planting has been brought to a stand-still in many of the state's southern counties as farmers wait for their fields to dry out, said members of the Alabama Farmers Federation.

Bert Driskell of Grand Bay in south Mobile County, says he is typically finished planting corn by now, but he currently has less than 50 percent in the ground.

The farm group says conditions are similar across south Alabama. In Washington County, farmer Walt Richardson said he had 10 acres of corn underwater. In Henry County, farmer Thomas Adams said fields were very wet with standing water.

In hard-hit Mobile County, the weekend forecast called for only a 20 percent chance of showers Friday, with dry weather expected Saturday and Sunday.

Dry weather was also expected Friday through Sunday in the Montgomery, Birmingham and Huntsville areas.

 

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