At least nine dead in US floods and heavy rain

- BBC News

At least nine dead in US floods and heavy rain

At least nine people have died over the weekend, as torrential downpours drenched parts of the south-eastern US, submerging roads and houses.

Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear said eight people died in his state and suggested at a news conference on Sunday that the total could go up.

Hundreds of people stranded in flood waters, many stuck in their cars, had been rescued, and Beshear warned residents to "stay off the roads right now and stay alive".

In Georgia, the ninth death was recorded after a man lying in his bed was struck by an uprooted tree that crashed into his home.

Kentucky, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia and North Carolina were under some type of storm-related alert this weekend. Almost all of those states suffered catastrophic damage in September from Hurricane Helene.

Between the eight states, roughly 400,000 people were without power on Sunday afternoon, according to poweroutage.us.

A bulk of the death and destruction appears to have occurred in Kentucky, where a mother and her seven-year-old child and a 73-year-old man were among the dead.

Some parts of Kentucky received up to 6in (15cm) of rain, National Weather Service figures show, resulting in "widespread flooding issues".

The rapid influx of rain caused river levels to quickly rise and trapped vehicles in feet of water, images posted online show.

Governor Beshear wrote on X that there were over 300 road closures.

He also said that he had written to the White House requesting an emergency disaster declaration and federal funds for impacted areas, according to the BBCs partner CBS News.

President Donald Trump approved the declaration on Sunday, authorizing the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema), which he has suggested abolishing, to coordinate disaster relief efforts.

Officials have cautioned that the worst of the flooding is not over yet.

"The rivers are still going to rise," Eric Gibson, director of the Kentucky Division of Emergency Management, said during a Sunday briefing.

"The effects will continue for awhile, a lot of swollen streams and a lot of flooding going on," Bob Oravec, a senior forecaster with the NWS, said.

In Obion County, Tennessee, heavy rains there caused a levee to break, "resulting in rapid onset flooding", a local NWS account said on X.

"If you are in the area, GET TO HIGH GROUND NOW! This is a LIFE THREATENING situation," the post says.

The town of Rives along the Obion River was swamped with water from the breached levee.

Footage shows brown water rushing over rocks and past trees, as rescue workers in red boats drive by flooded homes.

West Virginia Governor Patrick Morrisey issued a state of emergency in 10 counties on Saturday and added another three counties to the list on Sunday.

"Please continue to be cautious," Morrisey said on X.

Kristi Noem, the newly installed head of the Department of Homeland Security, said she has been in contact with both Beshear and Morrisey, and left voicemails with Tennessee Governor Bill Lee and Alabama Governor Kay Ivey. Fema is part of her department.

"While emergency management is best led by local authorities, we reinforced that DHS stands ready to take immediate action to offer resources and support," Noem said.

Meteorologists have also warned that a polar vortex is making its way toward the northern Rocky Mountains and northern Plains in the middle of the countryand is expected to land this weekend.

In Colorado, temperatures could drop to as low as 14F (-10C), with the city of Denver reportedly opening shelters for its homeless population this weekend.



Read it all at BBC News