Floods trigger emergency and disaster declarations throughout the Midwest



[ad_1]

Breaking News Emails

Receive last minute alerts and special reports. News and stories that matter, delivered in the morning on weekdays.

By Dennis Romero

Midwestern governors declared a state of emergency, as extreme weather and heavy rains hit parts of the region on Friday.

The National Weather Service announced Friday that flooding would hit parts of the Mississippi and Missouri valleys on Monday, with a cold front reaching up to 74 million Americans leaving the Rocky Mountains for the east coast.

Earlier this week, the storm became what forecasters describe as a bombogenesis or a cyclone bomb, where a front falls 24 millibars, or units of atmospheric pressure, in less than 24 hours.

The system caused not only 2 to 3 inches of rain, but also warm temperatures in some areas to melt snow and ice, contributing to flooding, officials and forecasters said. According to the meteorological service, the front will reach the center of the Atlantic coast Sunday and will probably produce rain.

[ad_2]

Source link