1,000 people rescued from Deadly flooding in Louisiana
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At least three people has died and one has gone missing in severe flooding that has swamped a large swath of southeastern Louisiana and southern Mississippi.
Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards has declared a state of emergency.
The Amite and Comite rivers are both expected to set new flood level records.
Rising waters entered St. Helena Parish Hospital.
Two people have died and one remains missing as torrential rains continue to inundate both Louisiana and southern Mississippi, flooding homes and forcing evacuations and water rescues.
More than 24 inches of rain have fallen in Livingston, Louisiana, according to observations relayed to the National Weather Service, and Gov. John Bel Edwards declared a state of emergency for the entire state. Edwards is heading back to Louisiana, cutting short a trip to Colorado for a meeting of the Democratic Governors Association, according to the Associated Press.
The downpours have also been sending area riversrising quickly toward historic crests, with the Amite River in Denham Springs, Louisiana, already reaching historic levels and expected to rise 4 1/2 feet above the record.
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Two Dead in LouisianaFlooding triggered by the heavy rainfall has left at least three people dead in the Pelican State.
On Friday, 68-year-oldWilliam Mayfield drowned trying to escape floodwaters near Zachary, Louisiana, as heavy rains piled up water in the northeastern regions of the state, NBC News reported.
"We were in the trailer just watching TV and then the water just started coming up," Vernon Drummond, Mayfield"s roommate, told the station. "We were walking out and he slipped and fell. He went under the water. We tried to save him, but we couldn"t."
Rescue crews in Zachary recovered Mayfield"s body Friday morning, according to WAFB. Drummond says Mayfield is originally from Los Angeles and does not have any family in the area.
According to East Baton Rouge Parish Emergency Management Director JoAnne Moreau, the body of an elderly man was recovered. The victim was being helped through floodwaters when he slipped into a ditch.
A man is still missing after he and his son were swept away by rushing waters in Tangipahoa Parish, reports CNN.
Police Chief Darrell Martin told CNN that the son has been located.
"Be Prepared to Leave"According to WWL-TV,the Bogue Chitto River is expected to crest at 18 feet, and deputies are going door-to-door in Bogue Chitto Heights telling residents "be prepared to leave." In Tangipahoa Parish, president Robby Miller instructed residents living near the Tangipahoa River to leave their homes and find a safer place to stay until the water recedes, the New Orleans Times-Picayune reported.
The flooding was so bad Friday in Walker, Louisiana, that caskets were unearthed in St. Mark"s Cemetery. Photos posted by the Walker Police Department on Facebook showed at least two bright yellow caskets floating in floodwaters.
"Virtually every road now in the city has some kind of water problem," Central, Louisiana, mayor Jr. Shelton told the Baton Rouge Advocate. "We"ve never seen anything like this before."
Aschool bus ferrying children home veered off the road and into a ditch in Zachary, according to a separate Baton Rouge Advocate report. Zachary police chief David McDavidsaid no one was injured in the accident, which likely occurred when the driver didn"t see a turn due to high floodwaters.
The National Weather Service (NWS) declared a flash flood emergency Friday morning as rising water entered St. Helena Parish Hospital and a local nursing home. The rising water was also responsible for isolating the towns of Greenburg, Louisiana, and Osyka, Mississippi.
Flooding also forced an Amtrak train traveling from Chicago to New Orleans to stop in central Mississippi because floodwaters covered the tracks, according to the AP. Amtrak planned to bus the passengers to New Orleans, the report added.
A motorist sustained moderate injuries Friday after a tree was knocked over onto their vehicle in St. Helena Parish, according to the Louisiana Police Department.
Storms in Crosby, Mississippi, flooded much of the town Friday afternoon and evening, according to Wilkinson County Emergency Management Director Thomas Tolliver. Fifty-two residents voluntarily fled the town to a shelter in Natchez Thursday afternoon, Tolliver also told weather.com. Crosby is home to about 300 people.
Water rescues have also been reported in Centreville, Mississippi, according to the NWS.
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The National Guard has deployed high water vehicles to make rescues in St. Helena Parish, Louisiana, WWLT.com reports. Interstate 55 was closed in both directions in St. Helena Parish due to flooding, the Louisiana Department of Transportation reported Friday.
St. Charles Parish President Larry Cochran declared a state of emergency Thursday in a precautionary move in anticipation of further rainfall and flooding later this week, WBRZ.com reported.
"Within two hours, it was flooded," St. Charles resident Tiffany Jackson told Fox 8. It went from master bedroom to my sons bedroom to the hallway to the kitchen to the bathroom, and every time I swept it up it just kept coming back in."
The office of Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards on Saturday morning also released a revised list of shelters for those impacted by floods.
Rivers Rising to Record LevelsAll this heavy rain quickly overwhelmed waterways in the region. The Tickfaw River reached a record flood stage of 13.33 feet at Liverpool, according to the NWS, and crests on the Amite and Comite Rivers are forecast to exceed record levels set in 1983.
By Saturday morning, the Amite River in Denham Springs, Louisiana, had reached the historic crest level of 41.5 feet, according to NWS. The tributary has been forecasted to reach 46 feet by Sunday morning.
As of Saturday,the Comite River in Louisiana has surpassed its historic level of 30.64 feet. The waterway crested to 31.74 feet and is forecasted to rise to 34.5 feet by Sunday morning.
During the record flood that year, the Amite and Comite riversflooded3,025 homes and businesses in Livingston Parish, 1,615 in East Baton Rouge Parish and 828 in Ascension Parish, the Baton Rouge Advocate said.
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