Flood fears rise as wicked storm system tears across southern, central US
February 26, 2018 by admin
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Heavy rain Thursday night continued to put the area’s flood protection systems under stress, and as Ohio River waters rise, it’s expected to cause potentially dangerous conditions. The swollen Ohio River will keep rising through at least Monday, according to the latest projections from the National Weather Service, with moderate flooding expected outside of protected areas in the days ahead, There remained significant concerns about potential flash flooding on Saturday with another round of heavy rain expected to move through the area that day, authorities said.
Mary Anne
LOUISVILLE – A violent storm system with relentless rains and fierce winds that pounded the southern and central U.S. over the weekend could lead to treacherous flooding in the days ahead.
The system that stretched from Texas to the Canadian maritime provinces left a path of destruction as it cut eastward Sunday: Homes were leveled, trees uprooted, cars demolished. Five people were killed, two in suspected tornadoes. Emergency crews struggled to keep up with calls from drivers stranded by rising floodwaters in many locations.
Flooding will continue to be a threat this week as more rain falls and runoffs continue, Accuweather said. More than 200 river gauges reported levels above flood stage from the Great Lakes to eastern Texas, the Weather Channel reported.
By Sunday, the river gauge near downtown Louisville showed the Ohio River at 34.9 feet. The normal level is about 12 feet. In 1997, the water was measured at 38.8 feet; roughly 50,000 homes flooded, and the Louisville area alone saw $200 million in damage.
Floodwaters on the Ohio River in Louisville and Cincinnati are at their highest level in about 20 years, the Weather Channel said Sunday. The river was forecast to reach moderate flood stage along the southern border of Ohio and West Virginia in the coming days, according to the National Weather Service.
In Adairville, Ky., Dallas Jane Combs, 79, died after a likely tornado struck her home, the Logan County Sheriff’s Department told TV station WKRN.
Two bodies were also recovered from submerged vehicles in separate incidents in the state Saturday.
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In southwestern Michigan, the body of a man was found floating in floodwaters Sunday in Kalamazoo, city Public Safety Lt. David Thomas said.
In northeast Arkansas, Albert Foster, 83, was killed when his trailer home toppled under high winds, Clay County Sheriff Terry Miller told KAIT-TV.
At least three people were injured and several Clarksville-area homes were destroyed as the storms tore across Middle Tennessee.
A 15-year-old girl hit by falling debris during an Austin Peay State University basketball game was transported to Tennova Hospital in Clarksville for precautionary reasons, according to Kevin Young of the Austin Peay athletics department.
The National Weather Service confirmed Sunday that a tornado of at least an EF-2 strength, with maximum winds of up to 120 mph, hit the area east of Clarksville.
Kim Nicholson was watching television with her husband when a quick but violent storm slammed into her Farmington home, shaking it off its foundation and ultimately leaving it in a heap of rubble.
Nicholson recalled going downstairs for safety after she received a cellphone alert. When she looked outside, things didn’t seem right: “A weird green color,” she said.
Then winds picked up and “the whole house itself, actually, was like jumping,” she said.
Across a pond from the Nicholsons’ destroyed house, Mark and Ruth Laurent surveyed damage to their home. The storm ripped off their entire wrap-around front porch and sent it into the garage across the street. “I’m just glad we walked away from it,” Mark Laurent said.
On Sunday, neighbors flocked to the devastation to help pick up the pieces.
Insulation, household items and framing were strewn about the entire subdivision. Residents worked to rescue a family dog trapped beneath the rubble of a house. A statue of Mary, set upright by a volunteer, was one of the only things left intact on one piece of property.
“To look at what I’m looking at and know we didn’t lose anybody is just a miracle,” Montgomery County Mayor Jim Durrett said Sunday as he surveyed the damage.
More: Injuries, at least four homes destroyed as storm rips through Middle Tennessee
More: Flash floods, deadly tornadoes and mudslides: What you missed in Louisville overnight
More: Cincinnati flooding: A day of record rainfall worsens road flooding, disrupts region
In Kentucky, a MetroSafe supervisor told the Louisville Courier-Journal that there had been 75 to 100 phone calls flagging abandoned vehicles and that at least 20 people needed to be rescued from cars and buildings because of rising floodwaters.
Emergency crews were inundated with calls for help from stranded drivers in Evansville, Ind.
“It’s pretty bad out there pretty much everywhere,” said Braden Buss, with Vanderburgh County Central Dispatch Center. “We’re getting high water calls, manhole covers coming off, some residential flooding. Don’t go out if you don’t have to.”
The Cincinnati Police Department reported making numerous water rescues, and road closings seemed to multiply by the hour early Sunday. Many residents had to evacuate; two post offices were relocated.
The weather did exactly what meteorologists feared: It dumped an additional 2-3 inches of rain on already soggy southwest Ohio communities.
“To put that much water on already saturated soil without much vegetation to suck it up — that was what we were most concerned about,” said Kristen Cassady, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Wilmington.
In central Ohio on Sunday, police in Shelby County searched for a 6-year-old boy who was swept away in Tawawa Creek. Sheriff Sgt. Aaron Steinke told WHIO-TV late Sunday that the search was being called off for the night.
The deaths in Kentucky and Arkansas on Saturday marked an unfortunate milestone: They were the first linked to a twister in 284 days, ending the USA’s longest streak of days without tornado deaths since accurate records began in 1950, according to NOAA’s Storm Prediction Center.
That easily beats the previous record streak of 220 days set from June 24, 2012, through Jan. 30, 2013, said Patrick Marsh, a meteorologist at the center.
Before Saturday, the USA’s most recent deadly tornadoes both hit on May 16, 2017, in Oklahoma and Wisconsin.
Long stretches without a single tornado death are becoming more common: All streaks of 200 days or longer have occurred within the past five years, Marsh said.
An average of 71 people are killed each year by tornadoes, based on data from 1987-2016, the Weather Channel reported.
Novelly reported from Louisville; Miller and Rice from McLean, Va. Contributing: Jake Lowary, Chris Smith, Jason Gonzales, Clarksville Leaf Chronicle; Jamie McGee, Nashville Tennessean; Jessie Higgins and Michael Doyle, Evansville Courier Press; Carrie Blackmore Smith, Bob Strickley, Jeanne Houck, Shella Vilvens, Cincinnati Enquirer; the Associated Press
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Five things to know about Trump’s new North Korea sanctions
February 26, 2018 by admin
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The Trump administration slapped a new tranche of sanctions on North Korea on Friday in what President TrumpDonald John TrumpAccuser says Trump should be afraid of the truth Woman behind pro-Trump Facebook page denies being influenced by Russians Shulkin says he has White House approval to root out ‘subversion’ at VA MORE billed as the United States’ “heaviest sanctions ever.”
While experts debated whether the sanctions really were the “heaviest ever,” Friday’s action was seen as a significant step in the Trump administration’s pressure campaign to halt North Korea’s nuclear and missile programs.
For much of Trump’s presidency, the United States and North Korea have engaged in a rhetorical tit-for-tat as Pyongyang makes strides towards developing a nuclear weapon capable of hitting the U.S. mainland.
The Trump administration has also bulked up the sanctions regime against North Korea, shepherding several rounds of ever-tougher international sanctions through the United Nations and imposing new unilateral sanctions. Treasury Secretary Steven MnuchinSteven Terner MnuchinOvernight Tech: Judge blocks ATT request for DOJ communications | Facebook VP apologizes for tweets about Mueller probe | Tech wants Treasury to fight EU tax proposal Overnight Regulation: Trump to take steps to ban bump stocks | Trump eases rules on insurance sold outside of ObamaCare | FCC to officially rescind net neutrality Thursday | Obama EPA chief: Reg rollback won’t stand Big tech lobbying groups push Treasury to speak out on EU tax proposal MORE said the United States now has 450 sanctions against North Korea, half of which have come in the last year.
Here are five things to know about the most recent sanctions.
The sanctions target illicit activities on the high seas
As sanctions tighten trade in and out of North Korea, U.S. authorities are stepping up their efforts to make sure North Korea doesn’t get around those restrictions.
The new U.S. sanctions are aimed target 27 shipping and trade companies, 28 vessels and one individual in an effort to clamp down on illicit trade with North Korea.
The targeted entities are located, registered or flagged in North Korea, China, Singapore, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Marshall Islands, Tanzania, Panama and the Comoros.
The sanctions are aimed particularly at ship-to-ship transfer of coal and fuel, which North Korea relies on to keep its struggling economy afloat and to run its nuclear and missile programs.
Still, it’s unclear how much the new sanctions will hurt North Korea, an expert in evading trade restrictions.
“The large number of targets may temporarily put a squeeze on North Korean shipping by increasing the risk of engaging with any of the designated companies or ships,” Andrew Keller, a partner at Hogan Lovells and the former deputy assistant secretary of State for sanctions and counter threat finance, said in a statement. “There’s no guarantee, though, that today’s action will ultimately be effective in preventing the illicit trade in coal and fuel with Pyongyang.
“North Korea has shown itself to be masterful at circumventing sanctions, and the U.S. cannot stop that without sustained effort from China and Russia.”
The Trump administration is naming and shaming
In addition to the sanctions, the Treasury and State Departments and the U.S. Coast Guard issued a global shipping advisory putting the world on notice that there will be consequences for helping North Korea.
“As part of the maximum pressure campaign against North Korea, the United States is committed to disrupting North Korea’s illicit funding of its weapons programs, regardless of the location or nationality of those facilitating such funding,” the advisory reads. “As such, the United States will continue targeting persons, wherever located, who facilitate North Korea’s illicit shipping practices.”
Treasury also released five new photographs purporting to show the tactics North Korea uses to evade sanctions. For example, one shows what Treasury says is a North Korean ship that falsely declared a Chinese homeport, used a name that does not correspond to any current or former vessels and usedthe International Maritime Organization number of an entirely different ship in attempts to evade detection.
Harry Kazianis, director of defense studies at the Center for the National Interest, said the shipping advisory and the pictures are an effort to “name and shame” what North Korea does to evade sanctions.
“It gives public a face of what’s going on,” he said. “It’s a smart way to go.”
Russia was not targeted
Though the sanctions take aim at entities across the world for doing business with North Korea, none of those entities are Russian.
Russia, like China, has been accused of being one of the worst offenders at helping Pyongyang evade sanctions.
Not including Russia in Friday’s move could draw the ire of critics who say Trump is soft on Moscow.
Indeed, Rep. Eliot EngelEliot Lance EngelWhy the US should lead on protecting Rohingya Muslims HHS chief: No decision yet on lifetime limits for Medicaid Top Dems demand answers from State Department after employees cite career concerns MORE (D-N.Y.), the ranking member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, took Friday’s announcement as an opportunity to hit Trump on not imposing sanctions on Russia for its election interference.
“Trumpeting more sanctions as a get-tough tactic against North Korea makes it even stranger that this White House refuses to use sanctions against Russia in response to an attack on our democracy,” Engel said in a statement.
Mnuchin insisted the Trump administration would sanction Russian vessels and entities for North Korea issues if warranted.
“We’re prepared to blacklist Russian ships to the extent there are Russian ships,” he said at a briefing on the sanctions. “So let me be clear, whether they’re Russian ships, whether they’re Chinese ships, we don’t care whose ships they are. If we have intelligence that people are doing things, we will put sanctions on them.”
Mnuchin also told reporters, without prompting, that his department continues to work on sanctioning Russia for its 2016 election interference and would have more information “within the next several weeks.”
The Olympics thaw is ending
The new sanctions came as Ivanka TrumpIvana (Ivanka) Marie TrumpKushner resisting giving up top access amid scrutiny over security clearances: report In new memo, Kelly changes White House security clearance process Kushner disclosed additional assets in amended financial disclosure form: report MORE, the president’s daughter and trusted advisor, landed in South Korea to lead the U.S. delegation at the Winter Olympics closing ceremony.
Mnuchin downplayed the timing, saying they sanctions were announced now because that’s when they were ready. Still, Mnuchin added that Ivanka Trump was briefed on the sanctions and spoke with South Korean President Moon Jae-in about them over dinner.
The lead-up to the Olympics saw a thaw in tensions on the Korean peninsula as the United States agreed to postpone joint military exercises with South Korea and Pyongyang sent athletes and a delegation to the games.
But few, if any, expected the thaw to last. And Friday’s announcement appeared to be confirmation for the skeptics that U.S.-North Korean relations willheat up again soon.
Kazianis described the timing as a carrot-and-stick approach: North Korea is getting hit with the stick of sanctions while having the carrot of possibly reaching out to Ivanka Trump in South Korea dangling in front of them.
Still, he stuck by his previous assessment that North Korea will restart nuclear and missile testing and the United States will restart joint military drills after the Paralympics in March, ratcheting up tensions once again.
Military options are still on the table
Hours after Trump announced the sanctions, the president raised the possibility of military action.
If the sanctions announced Friday do not work, Trump warned, “we’ll have to go to phase two,” which he said “may be a very rough thing.”
“We’ll have to see,” Trump said during a joint press conference with Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull at the White House. “I don’t think I’m going to exactly play that card. But we’ll have to see. If the sanctions don’t work we’ll have to go to phase two. Phase two may be a very rough thing. May be very, very unfortunate for the world.”
It’s unclear what type of military action Trump was hinting at.
Reporters earlier asked Mnuchin several times about the possibility of a naval blockade, which North Korea could consider an act of war. Mnuchin declined to comment on military options.
“As the president has said before, we’re not going to announce in advance anything we may do in the future on military actions,” Mnuchin said. “What I would say again is, right now we are using the full power of the United States economically, and working with our allies to cut them off economically. That’s the priority of the maximum-pressure campaign at the moment.”