- KRVN Audio
- Nebraska FFA Foundation Interviews
- 2010 Commodity Classic Reports
- On The Road for Agriculture
More Ag News
- New beef resource center wants to spread facts
- Young Producers want to shape future
- Center for Rural Affairs analyzes health care provisions
- Pioneer agronomists say look for foliar diseases
- ASA presents plan to double exports by 2015
- NFu and other ag groups want RES in senate package
- Senators question USDA budget
- Growth Energy says Fueling Freedom Plan mischaracterized
- EPA rejects climate science as flawed
- NCBA releases responses to audit audit
- Kansas Super Cow-Calf show entries due August 16
- Kansas farmers test teff as alternative on dryland
- Corn Board members elected to national boards
- SNAP subject of subcommittee hearing
- CRP sign-up important for Nebraska
- NMPF reminds FDA food packages need proper labels
- Money available for conservation projects
- ARS signs partnership agreement
- DU says CRP sign-up comes at critical time
- New dynamic emerging in WTO talks
- R-CALF wants GIPSA rules now
- Looks like mandatory price reporting will be extended
- Growth Energy & ISU researcher at odds
- OIS audit confirms soybean checkoff on track
- National soybean checkoff sound
- NCBA responds to audit report
- Problems found with NCBA audit
- Scottsbluff considers ADA study of major thoroughfares
Ag News
Widespread spring flooding forecast
RANDOLPH E. SCHMID,AP Science WriterWASHINGTON (AP) — With truckloads of sandbags rolling into cities like Fargo, N.D. and Moorhead, Minn., the government confirmed residents' fears Tuesday, forecasting major flooding in the Midwest following a wetter than normal winter.
North Dakota, Minnesota, South Dakota and Iowa were listed as the greatest flood threat, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said parts of the South and East are also more susceptible than usual to high water.
A winter influenced by the El Nino phenomenon left large areas soggier than usual, NOAA said.
This year's snowpack tops last year's in many areas with as much as 10 inches of water resulting in some regions.
"We are looking at potentially historic flooding," NOAA Administrator Jane Lubchenco said at a briefing.
"It's a terrible case of deja vu, but this time the flooding will likely be more widespread. As the spring thaw melts the snowpack, saturated and frozen ground in the Midwest will exacerbate the flooding of the flat terrain and feed rising rivers and streams," Lubchenco said.
In particular, she said, flooding is expected along the Raccoon, Des Moines, James and Red rivers of the North.
Fargo set a record last year and "we'll likely see similar but more widespread flooding" this year, said National Weather Service Director Jack Hayes.
The current snowpack is among the top 10 since World War II with much of it remaining on the ground because of the cold weather, Hayes said, so rivers in the Midwest are likely to remain above flood stage for weeks or more.
Des Moines Mayor Frank Cownie said his city, still recovering from previous flooding, has closed off some low-lying roads and is bringing in extra pumps "just in case."
Gary Carter, director of hydrology for the Weather Service, said it is extremely unusual to see this amount of wetness two years in a row.
"In the South and East, where an El Nino-driven winter was very wet and white, spring flooding is more of a possibility than a certainty and will largely be dependent upon the severity and duration of additional precipitation and how fast existing snow cover melts," Hayes added.
El Nino, a periodic warming of the tropical Pacific Ocean can affect weather worldwide. It is expected to continue at least through spring.
In addition to the region of highest flood hazard, there is an above-normal chance of flooding across the south from West Texas to the Atlantic Coast and north to the southern two-thirds of New England and much of the Midwest.
Regions listed as expecting below normal flooding are northern Michigan including the Upper peninsula and adjacent areas of Wisconsin; also the Pacific Northwest, most of California, Nevada, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming and northern Utah and Colorado.
© 2010 The Nebraska Rural Radio Association. All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.













