Swollen rivers are flooding towns in US South after prolonged deluge of rain

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Frankfort (US), Apr 8 (AP) Days of unrelenting downpours swelled rivers to near record levels across Kentucky on Monday, submerging neighbourhoods and threatening a famed bourbon distillery in the state capital.
     Inundated rivers posed the latest threat from persistent storms that have killed at least 23 people since last week as they doused the region with heavy rain and spawned destructive tornadoes.
     At least 157 tornadoes struck within seven days beginning March 30, according to a preliminary report from the National Weather Service. Though the storms have finally moved on, the flood danger remains high in several other states, including parts of Tennessee, Arkansas and Indiana.
     Cities ordered evacuations, and rescue crews in inflatable boats checked on residents in Kentucky and Tennessee, while utilities shut off power and gas in a region stretching from Texas to Ohio.
     Floodwaters forced the closure of the historic Buffalo Trace Distillery, close to the banks of the swollen Kentucky River near downtown Frankfort.
     Salon owner Jessica Tuggle watched Monday as murky brown water approached her Frankfort business. She and her friends had moved her salon gear to a nearby taproom.
     “Everybody was just, 'Stop raining, stop raining,' so we could get an idea of what the worst situation would be,” she said.
     Officials diverted traffic, turned off utilities to businesses and instituted a curfew in Frankfort as the river crested just short of a record Monday. More than 500 state roads across Kentucky were still closed Monday evening, Gov Andy Beshear said.
     Ashley Welsh, her husband, four children and pets had to leave their Frankfort home along the river Saturday evening, abandoning a lifetime of belongings.
     When she checked her house's cameras Sunday morning, the floodwaters had risen to the second floor.
     “My stuff was floating around in the living room," Welsh said. “I was just heartbroken. Our life is up there.”
    
     Storms leaving devastating impact
     Twenty-three deaths have been reported since the storms began Wednesday, including 10 in Tennessee. Among the four confirmed killed in Kentucky, a 9-year-old boy was caught up in floodwaters while walking to catch his school bus.
     A 5-year-old boy in Arkansas died after a tree fell on his family's home, police said. And a man was found dead in a submerged vehicle, the Arkansas Division of Emergency Management said.
     A 16-year-old volunteer Missouri firefighter died in a crash while seeking to rescue people caught in the storm. While in Carroll County, Tennessee, an electric department lineman died while working in the storms, state emergency management officials said.
     Two men sitting in a golf cart, a father and son, were killed when a tree fell on them at a golf course in Columbus, Georgia, Muscogee County Coroner Buddy Bryan said.
     The Kentucky River crested at Frankfort Lock at 14.71 metres Monday, just shy of the record of 14.8 metres set there on December 10, 1978, said CJ Padgett, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service's Louisville, Kentucky, office.
     Beshear said more than 1,000 people had no access to water and nearly 3,000 were under boil water advisories. The city of Harrodsburg about 48 kilometres south of Frankfort said on social media that its water system had to discontinue pumping around midnight because of flood levels on the Kentucky River.
     By Monday evening, the city's treatment plant was back to normal operations.
     John and Phyllis Sower hunkered down about a half-block from the river in their Frankfort home, which had about 122 centimetres of water in the cellar. A neighbour waded over Monday to bring them flowers on their front porch.
     “We are an island in the Kentucky River,” Phyllis Sower said.
     In northeastern Arkansas, Gov Sarah Huckabee Sanders called the scene “absolutely heartbreaking” around the town of Hardy, which took damage to its city hall and other buildings.
     West Memphis, Arkansas, Fire Chief Barry Ealy told WREG-TV that crews in the flood-prone city have rescued more than 100 people.
     In Dyersburg, Tennessee, Michael Glass had to evacuate Monday to a hotel with his wife, three children and dog after water reached his front door and his entire neighborhood became flooded.
     “It's been a really stressful time," he said. “When I woke up this morning, the waters came up dramatically. I had to make a choice whether to stay or get out of here.”
     A tornado destroyed more than 100 structures in McNairy County, Tennessee, tearing through the town of Selmer with winds estimated up to 257 kph, local emergency management officials said. State officials say severe weather killed five people in the county of roughly 26,100 residents.
    
     Why so much nasty weather?
     Though significant rains have ended in the Southern Plains and the Mississippi, Tennessee and Ohio valleys, flooding on most rivers will persist this week, with some smaller waterways receding in the next few days, according to the weather service.
     Forecasters attributed the violent weather to warm temperatures, an unstable atmosphere, strong winds and abundant moisture streaming from the Gulf.
     The NWS said 13 centimetres of rain fell Saturday in Jonesboro, Arkansas — making it the wettest day recorded in April in the city. Memphis, Tennessee, got 35 centimetres of rain from Wednesday to Sunday, the NWS said.
     Marshall County in western Kentucky received nearly 41 centimetres over the last five days, said Padgett, the meteorologist. Parts of central Kentucky received 25 to 30 centimetres over those days and eastern Kentucky received 15 to 20 centimetres, Padgett said.
     The storms come after the Trump administration cut jobs at NWS forecast offices, leaving half of them with vacancy rates of about 20 per cent, or double the level of a decade ago. (AP) NPK
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(This story has not been edited by THE WEEK and is auto-generated from PTI)