2 More Kansas Storm Deaths Reported

May 1, 2009

Two people were found dead in a southeast Kansas creek this week, bringing to five the number of deaths blamed on violent storms since the weekend.

The state Division of Emergency Management said Labette County
sheriff’s deputies found the bodies of a 26-year-old Parsons man
and a 22-year-old woman from Springfield, Mo., early Wednesday.
They were in a car submerged in 10 feet of water in Pumpkin Creek,
near Mound Valley. The two, whose names were not released, had been reported missing on April 28. Authorities believe they were traveling west on a local road and were swept into the creek at a low-water crossing.

A Lawrence man was killed by lightning in Jefferson County on April 25 while riding with motorcyclists on U.S. 24 in northern Kansas, and a 58-year-old Leavenworth man drowned on April 27 while trying to clean a spill drain in a private pond near Easton.

On April 28, the body of a 20-year-old Yates Center man whose truck was swept off the road was found in a farm field near Quincy after floodwaters receded.

By late April 29 afternoon, 2 to 4 inches of rain had fallen over much of Kansas in a 48-hour period. Rainfall totals were closer to 5 and 6 inches along a swath from southwest of Wichita into the Flint Hills, said Jim Caruso, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Wichita.

“The ground is definitely saturated,” he said.

Major street flooding was reported from the overflowing Walnut River in Winfield.

There were reports of at least three brief tornado touchdowns in Finney County and one in neighboring Haskell County in southwest Kansas, said Larry Ruthi, a meteorologist for the National Weather Service in Dodge City.

Cathy Hernandez, the Finney County emergency management coordinator, said U.S. 83 was closed from south of Garden City to Sublette in Haskell County because of snapped power poles.

There also were reports of overturned center-pivot irrigation systems along U.S. 83 about nine miles south of Garden City. Two buildings were damaged at a dairy, but Hernandez didn’t know if any livestock were injured.

Hernandez said deputies, public works employees and Kansas Highway Patrol troopers were driving around the area checking with residents where damage was spotted. Firefighters and emergency management workers also were responding to leaks of anhydrous ammonia, which is used as a fertilizer.

No injuries to people had been reported, she said.

Ruthi said the tornado threat diminished around 8:30 p.m. as the storm cell crossed into Haskell County and merged with another cell. No damage had been reported from the twister that touched down just east of U.S. 83 about two miles south of the Haskell-Finney county line, Ruthi said.

The forecast called for another storm system moving into the state yesterday afternoon or evening that could bring fairly widespread rainfall of 1 to 2 inches which could aggravate flooding in southeast and south-central Kansas, Caruso said.

But Caruso said meteorologists are not expecting severe flooding like that which drenched southeast Kansas in 2007.

Still, the Kansas Division of Emergency Management partially activated its state emergency operations center in Topeka to monitor river levels and prepare for any emergency response across the state.

Butler, Harper, Reno, Sumner and Wabaunsee counties have issued local disaster declarations due to flooding, the Division of Emergency Management said.

About 10 homes in Butler County have taken on water, while about 100 homes in Harper County had water in their basements and 12 had water in the first floor.

The National Weather Service also has reports of an undetermined number of homes flooded near Belle Plaine in Sumner County, south of Wichita, Caruso said.

Flood warnings were posted for communities along several eastern Kansas waterways, including the Marais des Cygnes River, Arkansas River, Walnut River, Pottawatomie Creek, Neosho River, Cottonwood River and Verdigris River.

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Associated Press Writer Heather Hollingsworth contributed to this report from Kansas City, Mo.

Topics USA Windstorm Flood Kansas

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