Current:Home > MarketsFamily that lost home to flooded river vows to keep store open as floodwaters devastate Midwest -Achieve Wealth Network
Family that lost home to flooded river vows to keep store open as floodwaters devastate Midwest
View
Date:2025-04-15 00:17:09
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A family that watched their home collapse into a flooded river near an at risk Minnesota dam is vowing to reopen their nearby store to sell its homemade pie and burgers as soon as its safe to do so.
The Rapidan Dam Store remained standing Wednesday, but after the house where its owners, Jenny Barnes and brother David Hruska, grew up toppled into the Blue Earth River near Mankato the day before, they aren’t entirely sure what’s next.
“We don’t know what will happen,” a post on the store’s Facebook page said Wednesday night, adding that it’s been a hard experience. “The Dam Store has not sold its last burger or sold its last slice of pie.”
That home’s disappearance into the river and the hundreds of flood-damaged or destroyed homes elsewhere in the upper Midwest are among the first property casualties of extreme weather gripping the region as floodwaters move south.
A swath through Nebraska, Iowa, South Dakota and Minnesota has been under siege from flooding because of torrential rains since last week, while also suffering through a stifling heat wave. Up to 18 inches (46 centimeters) of rain have fallen in some areas, pushing some rivers to record levels. Hundreds of people have been rescued and at least two people have died after driving in flooded areas.
In Iowa, more towns were bracing for floodwaters. The west fork of the Des Moines River was expected to crest at nearly 17 feet (5.1 meters) in Humboldt overnight into Thursday. About 200 homes and 60 businesses in Humboldt could be affected, officials said.
In the coming days, Nebraska and northwestern Missouri are expected to start to see the downstream effects of the flooding. Many streams and rivers may not crest until later this week. The Missouri River will crest at Omaha on Thursday, said Kevin Low, a National Weather Service hydrologist.
Some of the most stunning images have been of the floodwaters surging around the Minnesota dam.
Jessica Keech and her 11-year-old son watched part of the house near the dam fall into the river Tuesday night. They had often visited the area to see the dam and enjoy the pie from the Dam Store.
“It just kind of sucked it into the water. Just literally disappeared,” said Keech, of nearby New Ulm.
Blue Earth County officials said Wednesday that the river had cut more widely and deeply into the bank, and they were concerned about the integrity of a nearby bridge over the river. After the flooding subsides, the county must decide whether to make repairs to the dam or possibly remove it — with both options costing millions of dollars.
President Joe Biden spoke by phone with Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz to discuss the impacts to the Rapidan dam and the Federal Emergency Management Agency had arrived in Minnesota, White House officials said.
Preliminary information from the National Weather Service shows the recent flooding brought record-high river levels at more than a dozen locations in South Dakota and Iowa, surpassing previous crests by an average of about 3.5 feet (1 meter).
In southeastern South Dakota, residents of Canton were cleaning up after getting 18 to 20 inches (46 to 51 centimeters) of rain in just 36 hours last week. A creek beside the 20 acres (8 hectares) owned by Lori Lems and her husband flooded the playground they’d built in their backyard for their grandchildren.
Lems, a 62-year-old former convenience store and wedding venue owner, said she’s lived in the town of 3,200 people all her life and never saw rain as intense as last week’s.
“We felt that we were in a hurricane-type of rain,” she said. “It was just unbelievable.”
Farther south, in North Sioux City, South Dakota, flooding collapsed utility poles and trees, and some homes were washed off their foundations. There was no water, sewer, gas or electrical service in that area, Union County Emergency Management said Tuesday in a Facebook post.
In the Sioux City, Iowa, area, water spilled over the Big Sioux River levee, damaging hundreds of homes, officials estimated. And the local wastewater treatment plant has been so overwhelmed by the floodwaters that officials say they’re having to dump about a million gallons (3.8 million liters) of untreated sewage per day into the Missouri River.
Numerous roads were closed because of the flooding, including Interstates 29 and 680 in Iowa near the Nebraska line.
___
Collins reported from Hartford, Connecticut. Associated Press journalists Summer Ballentine in Jefferson City, Missouri, John Hanna in Topeka, Kansas, and Lisa Baumann in Bellingham, Washington, contributed to this report.
veryGood! (42)
Related
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Semitruck driver killed when Colorado train derails, spilling train cars and coal onto a highway
- Child rights advocates ask why state left slain 5-year-old Kansas girl in a clearly unstable home
- A bear snuck into a Connecticut home and stole lasagna from a freezer
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- Have you heard of Margaret Winkler? She's the woman behind Disney's 100th birthday
- Jim Jordan still facing at least 10 to 20 holdouts as speaker vote looms, Republicans say
- Lake Erie breaks world record for most waterspouts in a 24-hour period, researchers say
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Noted Iranian film director and his wife found stabbed to death in their home, state media report
Ranking
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Pete Davidson talks on 'SNL' about Israel-Hamas war and losing his dad on 9/11
- Biden postpones trip to Colorado to discuss domestic agenda as Israel-Hamas conflict intensifies
- DT Teair Tart inactive for Titans game against Ravens in London
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Windy conditions cancel farewell mass ascension at Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta
- Americans express confusion, frustration in attempts to escape Gaza
- Russia’s assault on a key eastern Ukraine city is weakening, Kyiv claims, as the war marks 600 days
Recommendation
Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
French schools hold a moment of silence in an homage to a teacher killed in a knife attack
Healthcare workers in California minimum wage to rise to $25 per hour
Man convicted in fatal 2021 attack of Delaware police officer
Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
Evers finds $170M in federal dollars to keep pandemic-era child care subsidy program afloat
Afghanistan earthquake relief efforts provided with $12 million in U.S. aid
From opera to breakdancing and back again: Jakub Józef Orliński fuses two worlds