►Go to Teachers area for more updates
Lessons & Classroom Activities
Resources by grade level
Blogs
►Go to Students area for more updates
Interactive features
Online Reference Guides
|
Rising water uproots rural Louisiana residents in Mississippi River drama that will continue
Epic-scale flooding has displaced thousands of Southerners fleeing "what is surely the nation's slowest-moving natural disaster," as The New York Times front page put it Sunday. The rain-swollen Mississippi River threatened farms and towns for three weeks in a drama that escalated last weekend when federal engineers took a drastic step for the first time since 1973: They opened floodgates in Louisiana to lower the river's near-record levels. Water shot through the partially lifted spillway like a waterfall, as the video below shows. That diversion, which began Saturday and could last at least three weeks, is aimed at keeping Baton Rouge and New Orleans dry. But it lets water rise in swampy rural areas where about 25,000 people live and 11,000 buildings could be affected. Evacuations and sandbagging of homes, roads and an interstate highway started early last week in those communities, where oysters, shrimp and crawfish provide the main source of income. Some small Louisiana towns in what's known as Cajun country will be destroyed by water that could rise up to 25 feet. The situation is caused by runoff from heavy winter snowfalls in Minnesota, Illinois and other Upper Midwest states along the Mississippi, followed by steady rain in April. The high water rolling south is expected to reach its peak at New Orleans next Monday and then take up to two weeks to spill into the Gulf of Mexico. Until then, the impact of diverted water and the threat of wider floods will remain in the news.
Front Page Talking Points is written by
Felix Grabowski and Alan Stamm for NIEonline.com, Copyright 2013
We welcome comments or suggestions for future topics: Click here to Comment Front Page Talking Points Archive►Fresh population figures show the changing face of America ►U.S. scrutiny of online communication and calls stirs debate over snooping vs. security ►Facebook draws the line: Hateful, nasty posts about women are out of bounds ►Summer brings movie lineup of superheroes, zombies, sci-fi and comedies ►Federal safety board urges tougher drinking-and-driving cutoff limit to match other nations ►Northeast braces for noisy invasion: Flying cicada bugs return after hiding for 17 years ►U.S. military prison at Guantanamo, Cuba, remains a tricky problem for President Obama ►Doctors warn about serious health risks from 'The Cinnamon Challenge' video craze ►Earth Day on April 22 focuses attention on how we can protect the natural environment ►Thousands of past players take on the National Football League over brain injuries |