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Officials expects evacuations in Sioux City’s Riverside neighborhood to expand

News

June 24th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Big Sioux River crested in Sioux City this (Monday) morning at 45 feet. City Fire Marshal Mark Aesoph says that’s over seven feet higher than the previous record. “It’s just been difficult to predict what’s going to happen when levels are this high when we have no history with it,” he says. A temporary levee was built to protect a Sioux City neighborhood, but Aesoph says water has gone over another levee just to the east, which was not expected.

“The elevation at this area was apparently lower than anticipated and recorded for our planning purposes,” he says, “and what that did was it allowed water inside the levee area in Riverside.” Water has come up through storm drains in low areas of Sioux City’s Riverside neighborhood and a mandatory evacuation was issued for some areas. Aesoph says crews started going door to door this (Monday) morning to notify residents.

Officials expects evacuations in Sioux City’s Riverside neighborhood to expand

“We do anticipate that the evacuation area will continue to grow as water continues to rise within the levee,” Aesoph says. “The city has deployed many pumps through the area, but unfortunately we just can’t keep up with a river that is flowing at that pace with that much water.”

The Tyson Events Center is open as an emergency shelter and buses are available for residents who are evacuating.

Drake Relays Director Blake Boldon on the U-S Olympic Trials

Sports

June 24th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

The U-S Track and Field Olympic Trials continue in Eugene, Oregon, through next weekend as competitors bid for a spot on the U-S squad that will compete in Paris. Drake Relays director Blake Bolden says the U-S team is the most difficult track and field team in the world to make.

Former Indian Hills standout Kenny Bednarek is headed back to the Olympics after finishing second in the 100 over the weekend. He won silver in the 200 at the Tokyo Olympics.

Bednarek will compete in the 200 later this week.

Tonight, Urbandale native and former Dowling Catholic star Karissa Schweizer will bid for a spot on the U-S team in the 5,000 meter run. She competed in the Tokyo Olympics in both the 5,000 and the 10,000 and will need a top three finish tonight.
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One missing, 383 people rescued in Spencer as flooding rushed in

News

June 24th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Nearly 400 people had to be rescued as flood waters rushed into Spencer this weekend and one person has been reported missing. Spencer Fire Chief Jesse Coulson says his department launched two rescue teams — one on the north side of the river that cuts through the city and one on the south side of Spencer, then volunteers with boats joined the effort to rescue 383 people. “We had two rescued by the Air National Guard off of a vehicle top out of the river,” Coulson says. The driver of a submerged vehicle in Spencer has not been found.

“Otherwise, every rescue and all our searching that has been reported to us has been accounted for,” he says. An engineer who’s a frequent consultant for the City of Spencer estimates the rest on the Little Sioux River topped 22 feet. The previous high water mark was two feet lower — from a 1953 flood. Hundreds of Spencer homes have flood damage. About 400 Spencer residents sought refuge in shelters this weekend.

The Sioux County Sheriff released drone footage of Hawarden, Iowa, on Saturday.

Webster, Hamilton County prepare for large influx of water from the

News

June 24th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Counties downstream of the flooding in northwest Iowa are preparing for all that water to flow south. Webster County Emergency Management director, Dylan Hagen, says volunteers Sunday putting up sandbags along the Des Moines River. “We do still have sandbagging operations happening in Lehigh, Otho and Willa Ridge. We have sand and bags available for anybody that needs them,” Hagen says. “The city of Fort Dodge is currently working on, I believe three different sandbagging locations.” Hagen says the water flowing down could turn into a dangerous situation for those residents along the Des Moines River.

“It’ll be the third highest if it follows the forecasted model, so definitely something that is concerning to us and it is a dangerous situation and we just asked it people stay away from flooded areas and rivers,” he says. Hamilton County Emergency Management coordinator Tim Zahn says they’re shouldn’t have any major concerns. “There’s a small section near Stratford along the Des Moines River that is expected to crest at about 25 feet. That isn’t a major flood level. But it may affect the roads in that area a little bit,” he says.

Army Corps is checking levies in Missouri River basin

News

June 24th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Army Corps of Engineers has deployed four surveillance teams to check levies along the Missouri River, but the Corps is predicting minor to moderate flooding along the Missouri below Sioux City. John Remus is the Army Corps of Engineers chief of water management for the Missouri River basin. “As long as the levies hold, we are not expecting any major impacts. There will be some interior drainage issues,” Remus says. “There are some communities that do not have levies. We have not heard from them.” The Missouri River in the Omaha/Council Bluffs metro is expected to crest sometime Wednesday night or Thursday morning. The crest as the river exits Iowa near Nebraska City is expected to occur on Thursday night.

Kevin Lowe is a National Weather Service hydrologist who coordinates Missouri River forecasts. “We do expect flooding to happen along almost the entire Missouri River main-stem,” Lowe says. If forecasted river levels hold, officials say it’s likely levies along the river will work as designed. Spencer Giles is the emergency management chief for the Omaha district of the Army Corps of Engineers. He says the Corps provided technical assistance to officials in Dickinson and Buena Vista Counties this weekend and are ready to provide supplies where needed. “We maintain an inventory of various flood fighting materials and equipment positioned throughout the district,” he says.

In Dickinson County, the water level in Big Spirit Lake is more than a foot above its normal high water mark and Highway 9 between Lake Park and Spirit Lake remains closed due to flooding.

Gov. Reynolds Issues Disaster Emergency Proclamation for five counties in response to impending flooding in Western Iowa

News

June 24th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES – Gov. Kim Reynolds has issued a disaster proclamation for Fremont, Harrison, Mills, Monona, and Pottawattamie Counties in response to the impending flooding in Western Iowa.  The governor’s proclamation allows state resources to be utilized to prepare for, respond to, and recover from the effects of severe weather and temporarily suspends provisions or allows for the following during the duration of the proclamation:

  • Temporarily suspends the regulatory provisions of Iowa Admin. Code 11-53.11(3) prohibiting pay to those State of Iowa employees for hours worked in excess of 40 hours per workweek while present in the State’s Emergency Operations Center or otherwise engaged in assigned disaster response missions or other activities.
  • Temporarily suspends the regulatory provisions of Iowa Code Chapter 8A, Iowa Code § 313.10, Iowa Admin. Code chapters 11-117, 11-118 requiring the Iowa Department of Homeland Security and Emergency Management, the Iowa Department of Transportation, the Iowa Department of Public Safety, the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services, the Iowa Department of Natural Resources and other state agencies involved in the response to this disaster emergency to procure goods and services through a competitive selection process.
  • Temporarily suspends the regulatory provisions of Iowa Code § 321.449 pertaining to hours of service for disaster repair crews and drivers delivering goods and services while responding to disaster sites during the duration of this disaster, subject to conditions listed in Iowa Code § 321.449.
  • Temporarily suspends regulatory provisions of the Iowa Code that pertain to procurement of goods and services, hours of service for disaster repair crews, and various requirements for the transportation of loads related to disaster repairs.
  • Allows vehicles transporting corn, soybeans, hay, straw, silage, stover, fertilizer (dry, liquid, and gas), and manure (dry and liquid) to be overweight (not exceeding 90,000 pounds gross weight) without a permit for the duration of this proclamation.  This proclamation applies to loads transported on all highways within Iowa (excluding the interstate system) and those which do not exceed a maximum of 90,000 pounds gross weight, do not exceed the maximum axle weight limit determined under the non-primary highway maximum gross weight table in Iowa Code § 321.463 (6) (a) and (b), by more than 12.5 percent, do not exceed the legal maximum axle weight limit of 20,000 pounds, and comply with posted limits on roads and bridges.

Mills County Sheriff’s report, 6/24/24

News

June 24th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Glenwood, Iowa) – The Mills County Sheriff’s Office says two people were arrested on OWI charges over the weekend, and one person was arrested on a warrant. 47-year-old James Lee Wendt, of Omaha, was arrested at around 12:15-p.m. Saturday, on a warrant for Failure To Appear on Possession of a Controlled Substance/3rd offense, charge. His bond was set at $5,000.

At around 11-p.m., Saturday, Mills County Deputies arrested 42-year-old Gabrial Ramirez, of Omaha, for OWI/1st offense. Bond was set at $1,000. And, at around 12:25-a.m. Sunday, 25-year-old Jyden Paul Beaverson, of Malvern, was arrested in Mills County for OWI/2nd offense. His bond was set at $2,000.

Adair County Sheriff’s report, 6/24/24

News

June 24th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Greenfield, Iowa) The Adair County Sheriff’s Department reports two people were arrested and one person was cited over the past week. Last Wednesday, just before noon, 38-year-old Trel Curtis Peterson, of Des Moines, was arrested at the Adair Kum and Go convenience store. Peterson was taken into custody on an Adair County felony warrant fro Eluding/2nd or subsequent offense. He was being held without bond in the Adair County Jail until seen by a magistrate.

Last Tuesday evening, 43-year-old Donna Marie Ott, of Des Moines, was cited following a traffic stop in Greenfield. Ott was issued a citation for Driving While Barred. She was also issued a written warning for Failure to Provide Proof of Financial Liability.

And, on June 17th at around 2:18-a.m., Police in Stuart arrested a Missouri man following a traffic stop on westbound Interstate 80. The traffic stop was initiated after a woman called the Guthrie County Sheriff’s Office to report a GMC Sierra was “all over the road,” and not maintaining its speed. The same vehicle drove past the Stuart Police Officer near the 93 mile marker.

Officer Shane Martinson observed the vehicle swerving from lane-to-lane and cross the fog line multiple times. The pickups’ speeds varied from 53-to 74-miles per hour. After the Officer stopped the vehicle, he questioned the driver, 39-year-old Oscar Orlando Villanueva-Tabora, of Kansas City, MO. The man told him he was just tired, but Martinson saw the man’s eyes were blood-shot and watery, his speed was slurred, and that there was an odor of alcohol in the vehicle. Two open and empty bottles of Fireball liquor were found on the passenger side floorboard of the vehicle, and a white grocery bag near the console contained an open and partially empty bottle of Jack Daniels alcohol.

Tabora failed the Field Sobriety Tests and a Breath Alcohol Content test, which registered .198% (twice the legal limit for intoxication, in Iowa). He was placed under arrest for OWI/1st offense, Open Container, No Valid license, and failure to provide proof of insurance.

Villanueva-Tabora was released later that same day on a $1,000 bond.

More rain is predicted for water-logged NW Iowa

News, Weather

June 24th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Forecasters say some areas of northwest Iowa that are already seeing record flooding may get more rain late today and tonight (Monday). Making a bad situation even worse, National Weather Service meteorologist Jim Lee says the summer heat will be oppressive for the next few days as a Heat Advisory is posted for much of Iowa’s western half from 1 o’clock this afternoon until 8 tonight. “The high temperatures will probably only be in about the lower 90s or so,” Lee says, “but when you factor in the humidity, the heat index will be approaching 100 degrees at times, both today and Tuesday.” Some areas will feel much hotter, he says, as the forecast heat index for Council Bluffs late today is 111-degrees.

A few weeks ago, Iowa emerged from a drought that had lasted nearly four years, though now it’s almost like the rain showers are trying to make up for lost time. “Unfortunately, who’d of thought a few months ago we’d be wanting the rain to stop when we were in drought, but we just can’t quite seem to get out of this active pattern,” Lee says. “We do have more thunderstorm chances forecast, higher chances will be from this evening through tonight and then again on Tuesday afternoon and evening and we may have some severe weather with those.” Parts of the flooded region got more than ten inches of rain in the past week, which is some eight times more than normal, but Lee is hoping the approaching storms won’t make the flooding worse.

“At this time, the threat of that is more limited. The heavy rains that we had a couple of days ago are from storms that were moving repeatedly over the same areas,” Lee says. “Most of the time from now through Tuesday when we’re expecting one or more rounds of thunderstorms, the storms look like they’ll be moving a little more quickly, so the rain could still come down heavily, but hopefully we can avoid any kind of totals like we saw a few days ago.”

Lee says cooler weather is forecast to arrive on Wednesday, though the chances for rain also reappear on Thursday and Friday.

Missouri River flooding in Sioux City and downstream

News

June 24th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Residents in Sioux City’s Riverside neighborhood have been advised to prepare to evacuate due to major flooding. The Tyson Events Center is open for those who need a place to shelter. The Missouri River crested this (Monday) morning in Sioux City. John Benson, the director of Iowa Homeland Security and Emergency Management, says a lot of water is headed downstream. “This flood is not over,” Benson says. “…If you go look at the river gauges in the Missouri (River), they are going up and they are going to go up quickly. You will see those gauges peaking beginning the back part of this week.”

Most of the docks at the Missouri River Boat Club in Sioux City have been destroyed. The Big Sioux River meets the Missouri River in the area and Fleet Captain Dennis Butler says a massive amount of debris has been swept down the Big Sioux, including entire trees. Butler estimates it will take at least a couple of weeks to repair the docks. “Even with (the river) going down, we’ve got a lot of dock repairs to do, salvage what we can here and just hope to God it didn’t take everything away,” Butler says. “Got to get a little break to let us try and rebuild.”

On the South Dakota side of the Sioux City metro, a railroad bridge over the Big Sioux River collapsed at 11 o’clock Sunday night. The bridge was primarily used by trains hauling grain and crushed rock from Sioux City to Sioux Falls, South Dakota.

A railroad bridge over the Big Sioux River collapsed Sunday night. (Photo by KSCJ’s Woody Gottburg)