flash flooding, severe weather
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Severe thunderstorms have swept through a swath of the country with a population of 2.3 million people from northeast Texas through Arkansas and into southeast Missouri.
From The Associated Press
At least 20 people have died from flash flooding and tornado damage that swept across multiple states in the the midwestern and southern parts of the US over the weekend.
From BBC
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The Ohio River at Cincinnati remains under a flood warning Monday and the river is expected to reach a crest of more than 60 feet.
Ten states could see flooding continue throughout the rest of this week and perhaps longer even though rain has moved on.
The metro region’s housing shortage is acute. But by 2040, dozens of neighborhoods and suburbs are likely to have lost thousands of homes to floods, a new report found.
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Transportation officials are urging motorists to check travel conditions before they hit the road and to never drive through flooded roadways.
2don MSN
A 9-year-old Kentucky boy who died in floodwaters while walking to catch his school bus is being remembered by his teacher as the “sweetest, kindest boy.”
Some of the nation's worst flooding since Hurricane Helene last fall is continuing to unfold in the central U.S. this week.
Erwin said Burns residents are exhausted, particularly at the prospect of yet more flooding. More flooding could mean more Burns residents unable to use their bathrooms, sinks and washing machines and an even longer wait for the sewer system to be cleared of sewage and floodwater.
Thousands of Arkansans remain without power Monday after several days of severe weather swept through the state, injuring 13 people.