Skip to content
Article juicy
  • Trending !
  • International
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • VR / AI
  • NFL / NBA
  • Company Address
  • Client Portal
Article juicy
  • Trending !
  • International
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • VR / AI
  • NFL / NBA
  • Company Address
  • Client Portal

Kentucky flooding: Death toll ‘could potentially double’ as people in stricken areas remain hard to reach, governor says

Leave a Comment / Trending ! / By Amelia Doit



CNN
—

After days of fatal flooding washed away parts of eastern Kentucky and the death toll climbed to at least 25, first responders worked Saturday to account for missing residents, the state’s governor said.

Govt. Andy Beshear lamented that the number of deaths “is likely to increase” following what officials have described as unprecedented flooding in the region.

“To everyone in Eastern Kentucky, we are going to be there for you today and in the weeks, months and years ahead. We will get through this together,” Beshear said in a tweet Saturday.

The death toll is expected to rise in the coming days as rescuers search new areas that are currently impassable.

“This is a type of flood that even an area that sees flooding has never seen in our lifetime,” Beshear told CNN after returning from an aerial tour of flooding in Breathitt County on Friday. “Hundreds of homes wiped away with nothing left.”

Rescue efforts have been also hindered due to power outages that persisted early Saturday with more than 18,000 homes and businesses remaining in the dark, according to PowerOutage.us.

There is no accurate account of how many people remain missing in the aftermath as cell service is out in many areas. “It’s going to be very challenging to get a good number,” the governor said.

Massive floodwaters washed out homes in several counties, leaving some residents scrambling to their rooftops to escape the deadly flooding. Officials believe thousands have been affected by the storms, and efforts to rebuild some areas may take years, the governor said Friday.

“It is devastating for us, especially after the western part of our state went through the worst tornado disaster we’ve ever seen just seven-and-a-half months ago,” Beshear told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer, referencing a series of tornadoes that ripped through Kentucky in December and left 74 people killed.

Pictures: Catastrophic flooding in Kentucky

Matt Stone/Courier Journal/USA Today Network

Kermit Clemons helps his ex-wife, Lana Clemons, retrieve family items in Hazard, Kentucky, on Thursday, July 28.

Homes are submerged in floodwaters in Jackson, Kentucky, on Thursday.

Pictures: Catastrophic flooding in Kentucky

Leandro Lozada/AFP/Getty Images

Homes are submerged in floodwaters in Jackson, Kentucky, on Thursday.

James Jacobs signals to a National Guard helicopter flying overhead in Garrett, Kentucky, on Thursday.

Pictures: Catastrophic flooding in Kentucky

Pat McDonogh/USA Today Network/Reuters

James Jacobs signals to a National Guard helicopter flying overhead in Garrett, Kentucky, on Thursday.

Kermit Clemons gathers personal items and medicine from the home of his former mother-in-law on Thursday.  Flooding swept the trailer home off its foundation and carried it about 250 feet from its original location.

Pictures: Catastrophic flooding in Kentucky

Matt Stone/Courier Journal/USA Today Network

Kermit Clemons gathers personal items and medicine from the home of his former mother-in-law on Thursday. Flooding swept the trailer home off its foundation and carried it about 250 feet from its original location.

Pastor Pete Youmans consoles a tearful Debby Miniard as her father, Charles Blankenship, stands near where his garage used to be in Perry County.  Blankenship lost everything, including his trailer home.

Pictures: Catastrophic flooding in Kentucky

Matt Stone/Courier Journal/USA Today Network

Pastor Pete Youmans consoles a tearful Debby Miniard as her father, Charles Blankenship, stands near where his garage used to be in Perry County. Blankenship lost everything, including his trailer home.

Members of the Jackson Fire Department prepare for search-and-rescue operations in downtown Jackson on Thursday.

Pictures: Catastrophic flooding in Kentucky

Michael Swensen/Getty Images

Members of the Jackson Fire Department prepare for search-and-rescue operations in downtown Jackson on Thursday.

Robert Hollan, Kimberly DiVietri and their dog, Rascal, wait in a shelter inside the Hazard Community College Lee's College campus on Thursday.

Pictures: Catastrophic flooding in Kentucky

Arden S. Barnes/For The Washington Post/Getty Images

Robert Hollan, Kimberly DiVietri and their dog, Rascal, wait in a shelter inside the Hazard Community College Lee’s College campus on Thursday.

Terry Hatworth tries to wash the mud off Earl Wallen's porch in Garrett on Friday morning.  The tiny town was without clean water.

Pictures: Catastrophic flooding in Kentucky

Matt Stone/Courier Journal/USA Today Network

Terry Hatworth tries to wash the mud off Earl Wallen’s porch in Garrett on Friday morning. The tiny town was without clean water.

A car is submerged in floodwaters along Right Beaver Creek in Garrett.

Pictures: Catastrophic flooding in Kentucky

Pat McDonogh/USA Today Network/Reuters

A car is submerged in floodwaters along Right Beaver Creek in Garrett.

Lexington firefighters' swift-water rescue teams work in Lost Creek, Kentucky, on Friday.

Pictures: Catastrophic flooding in Kentucky

Michael Swensen/Getty Images

Lexington firefighters’ swift-water rescue teams work in Lost Creek, Kentucky, on Friday.

Tonya Smith reaches for food from her mother, Ollie Jean Johnson, to give to Smith's father, Paul Johnson, as they hang over a flooded Grapevine Creek in Perry County on Thursday.  Smith's trailer was washed away;  her father was staying the night in his home without power.

Pictures: Catastrophic flooding in Kentucky

Matt Stone/Courier Journal/USA Today Network

Tonya Smith reaches for food from her mother, Ollie Jean Johnson, to give to Smith’s father, Paul Johnson, as they hang over a flooded Grapevine Creek in Perry County on Thursday. Smith’s trailer was washed away; her father was staying the night in his home without power.

Homes and structures are flooded near Quicksand, Kentucky, on Thursday.

Pictures: Catastrophic flooding in Kentucky

Ryan C. Hermens/AP

Homes and structures are flooded near Quicksand, Kentucky, on Thursday.


Clay Nickels and his wife, McKenzie, spoke to CNN Saturday from their car after their home in the city of Neon, in Letcher County, was damaged two days ago.

“All of our family so far has been accounted for but we have neighbors who have not,” Clay Nickles said.

Nickles described Neon as a tight-knit community, “like Mayberry with Andy Griffith.”

“Everybody, whether they’re family or not, is like family,” he said. “In an event like this typically, if one or two people get devastated, everybody join in to help. In this situation, everyone is devastated.”

Nickles said they will leave their car later to help with cleanup efforts.

“This is tough but we will get through this,” Nickles said. “These people were fighters and mountain people have had a lot of heart.”

Deaths have been reported in Knott, Perry, Letcher and Clay counties. Fourteen people, including four children, were confirmed dead Friday afternoon in Knott County, according to the county coroner. It was not immediately clear how that number factors into the state’s overall death toll.

The four children were siblings, according to their aunt Brandi Smith, who said the family’s mobile home became overwhelmed with floodwaters and forced the family to rush to the roof for safety. She added that her sister, Amber, and her partner tried to save their children but were unable.

“They were holding on to them. The water got so strong, it just washed them away,” Smith told CNN.

Eastern Kentucky is expected to get some relief from heavy rain Saturday. Rain is possible Sunday into Monday, when there is a slight risk of excessive rain over the region, according to the Weather Prediction Center. Affected areas may include eastern Tennessee and along the Appalachians of North Carolina, Virginia and West Virginia.

Floyd County was under water after torrential rain Thursday.

The city of Hazard in southeastern Kentucky had seven of its nine bridges impassable, an “unheard of” number, Mayor Donald “Happy” Mobelini said Friday morning.

Among the buildings wiped out include a two-story church, pastor Peter Youmans told CNN Friday.

“All that you see is scraps of cement,” Youmans said of his Davidson Baptist Church, and witnessed floodwaters also wiping out a house nearby.

“It started raining so hard that it was clearly coming up into the parking lot,” he told CNN’s Jim Sciutto. “And then it got up into our house. That’s when I knew it was really bad because it’s never been in our house before. It was about a football.”

A small creek in front of Youmans’ house is about 8 or 10 feet wide and normally less than 6 inches deep, but during the flooding, trailers were moving down the creek, he said.

Parishioners would typically be helping the church at a time like this, yet they are “taking care of their own problems right now,” he noted.

“And some of them are in as bad or worse shape than we are in,” he said. “We’re just thankful that the house was not destroyed with my grandchildren in it.”

Meanwhile, Joseph Palumbo in Perry County is struggling to reach his home after another house washed up onto a road on the way, blocking access.

“We walk to the end of our driveway, and there is an entire double-wide trailer smashed into our bridge,” Palumbo told CNN Friday. The trailer had been across Highway 28 from his own house for decades, he said.

A house washed away by floodwaters in Kentucky.

“I’m still sort of traumatized because never in my life have I seen something like this,” Palumbo said.

And because the trailer landed on a small bridge over a creek, he and his girlfriend, Danielle Langdon, have no way of walking around it.

“We’re climbing up a ladder, scaling across a tin roof, mud everywhere,” Palumbo said. “The first day, we’re sliding across the tin roof to get to the other side.”

The resident of the destroyed home was not inside at the time of flooding and made it through the storm unharmed.

“I have friends that I haven’t seen in years reaching out to me,” Palumbo said. “It’s really heartening to see the way people help each other.”

At least 75% of Perry County had significant damage to homes and bridges, county judge Scott Alexander told CNN on Thursday.

“It’s a historic storm that we have encountered, I don’t think we’ve ever seen this much rain in a 24-hour period and it’s devastated the community,” Alexander said. “People lost homes, cars, it’s just an unusual event.”

.

Related

Post navigation
← Previous Post
Next Post →

Leave a Comment Cancel Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

  • Tom Holland: Spider-Man star announces social media break quoting mental health
  • ‘China threat’ emerges in elections from UK to Australia
  • Man rams barricade near Capitol, fires shots, then kills himself, police say
  • Lamar Jackson implies he will cut off extension negotiations with Ravens once the regular season starts
  • On TikTok, Election Misinformation Thrives Ahead of Midterms

AP Top News ASIA ASXPAC AU BITTER business business news CEEU CISC COM crime CWP dailymail DIPs Economy EMRG EUROP Europe GEN Government and politics middle east MTPIX MTVID NAME NASIA news NEWS1 NFL POL politics PXP Russia Russia-Ukraine war SAFE society Technology TOPCMB TOPNWS tvshowbiz UK united states US War WEU world news

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Cookie Policy (US)

Copyright © 2022 Article juicy

Manage Cookie Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
Manage options Manage services Manage vendors Read more about these purposes
View preferences
{title} {title} {title}