Do not wait until God's warning strikes the souls of
every person in this world, for it will be very difficult to respond and
change. Please respond now to God's call. There will not be much time after
God's warning for the fire of purification to befall you. Some events are
inevitable. Pray with all your hearts that you will be able to persevere in
your faith and not turn from God. Receive the sacraments while there is
still time.
Our Lady of Emmitsburg,
May 9, 1996
If the world continues to ignore the importance of prayer
and moral ethics and does not restore them to their rightful place, the
world will suffer a tragedy of a world war as never witnessed before in
history.
Our Lady of Emmitsburg
Feb. 17, 2000
If people continue
to walk the path
against the truth of God,
the hand of God’s justice
will pour forth on this
world as never before...
Our Lady of Emmitsburg
How much longer do you think terrible abominations
against God can continue before destruction of your world happens through
human hands?
Flooding Hits Historic 500-Year Levels in Iowa
Thursday, June 12, 2008
The National Weather Service called flooding in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, a
"historic hydrologic event" Thursday as the swollen river poured over its
banks at 500-year flood levels, forcing the evacuation of nearly 4,000
homes.
The National Weather Service issued a flood warning for the Cedar River in
east central Iowa Thursday, saying residents should expect "unprecedented
river crests" and calling the situation serious. One of the Cedar Rapids,
Iowa, levees already has broken.
"The rest of the levees in the city have not broken down but what the
problem is is the water went way up over the top — well over a foot over the
top of the levees," Dave Koch, the city's public information officer, told
FOX News, adding "it's a 500-year flood and it just overwhelmed us."
The Midwest has been inundated with floods in recent days, with a man dying
Thursday in Albert Lea, Minn., after his vehicle fell into a flooded stream.
Two others were rescued.
The flooded Iowa streets on June 12, 2008.
Officials estimated that 100 blocks in Cedar Rapids were under water.
"We're just kind of at God's mercy right now, so hopefully people that never
prayed before this, it might be a good time to start," Linn County Sheriff
Don Zeller said. "We're going to need a lot of prayers and people are going
to need a lot of patience and understanding."
The problems in Cedar Rapids came a day after frantic sandbagging enabled
the upstream cities of Cedar Falls and Waterloo to narrowly avoid widespread
flooding.
Despite several days spent preparing for the approaching high water, Cedar
Rapids couldn't avoid being hit hard. Rescuers had to use boats to reach
many of the residents stranded in 3,900 homes.
"There are homes, there are businesses, police department, fire department —
we're all under water," Koch said.
The flooded areas of Cedar Rapids, Iowa on June 12, 2008.
In downtown, flood waters neared the top of stop signs and cars were nearly
covered in water. People could be seen dragging suitcases up closed highway
exit ramps to escape the water.
It wasn't clear just how high the river had risen because a flood gage was
swept away by the swirling water.
The surging river caused part of a railroad bridge and about 20 hopper cars
loaded with rocks to collapse into the river. The cars had been positioned
on the bridge in hopes of weighing it down against the rising water.
"We're in uncharted territory — this is an event beyond what anybody could
even imagine," said Brian Pierce, a meteorologist with the National Weather
Service in Davenport.
As Cedar Rapids dealt with rising flood waters, other Iowa cities warily
watched rivers further swollen by storms overnight into Thursday that
brought up to 5 inches of rain across west central Iowa.
The heavy rain moved east during the day, soaking people as they hurried to
remove items from businesses as police told them to move to higher ground.
Joe Childers, an official at a U.S. Bank in downtown Cedar Rapids, was in
jeans and tennis shoes as he worked to protect items.
"We're trying to keep water out of as many places as we can," he said. "It's
pretty amazing. I don't think anyone really expected it this far."
Prisoners had to be moved from the Linn County jail, including some inmates
transferred from the Benton County jail in Vinton because of flooding. The
sheriff's office also was under water, Sheriff Don Zeller said.
"We've had to move our operations out of the area and to our alternate
emergency site," Zeller said. "We are just trying to regroup. When you don't
have all of your equipment and you don't have all your facilities to operate
out of — we're at a little bit of a disadvantage ... but we're carrying on
as normal."
In Des Moines, officials said they were urging residents to evacuate more
than 200 homes north of downtown because of concerns that the Des Moines
River would top a nearby levee.
Public Works Director Bill Stowe said officials were also watching the Des
Moines and Raccoon rivers through downtown Des Moines.
"We're certainly concerned and last night's rain elevated those concerns,"
Stowe said. "We'll be carefully watching the situation over the next couple
of days."
Despite rising water, the city's water treatment plant was operating
normally. The plant was knocked out of service in the 1993 floods, cutting
off water to Des Moines for 12 days.
Meteorologist Rod Donavon of the National Weather Service said there was a
strip of 3 to 5 inches of rain across west central Iowa and another strip of
2 to 3 inches in central Iowa.
"A lot of water fell in the Raccoon River basin, which is of concern as it
moves toward the Des Moines metro area," he said
Donavon said he had not seen any new river forecast projections but it will
"be a concern."
Gov. Chet Culver has declared 55 of the state's 99 counties as state
disaster areas. Nine rivers are at or above historic flood levels.
The flooded neighborhoods of Cedar Rapids, Iowa on June
14, 2008.
In Cedar Rapids, evacuations pushed deeper into flood-prone neighborhoods on
the city's southeast side Wednesday night. City officials imposed a 9 p.m.
to 5 a.m. curfew in evacuated neighborhoods.
Several emergency shelters were opened, and the city had closed all but one
of its bridges over the Cedar River.
"I believe that this is God's way of doing things, and I've got insurance,
so I'm not worried about it," said Tim Grimm, who was forced to leave his
home in the city's Czech Village area.
City Manager Jim Prosser said the river might exceed the capacity of the
protections Cedar Rapids had in place to control it.
"Our primary focus now is the life, safety and welfare of the public," he
said.
The City Council voted to give city officials emergency powers until the
floodwaters had subsided.
Public Works Director Dave Elgin told the City Council on Wednesday to
prepare for a long flood — not just a record-setting one.
Iowa City officials have approved a mandatory evacuation ordinance at a
special council meeting on Wednesday. The city put the order into effect
around 2 a.m. on Thursday for residents in the Normandy Drive area on the
city's north side near the Iowa River.
In Coralville, residents along two streets have until 5 p.m. Thursday to
evacuate. The city also is asking that residents try to avoid using running
water and toilets while it is raining, because the volume of water is
overwhelming the water plant.
Midwest Flooding Moves Onto Iowa, Where Death Toll May Rise Wednesday, August 22, 2007
(Compared to this flood
from 2007, the flooding of 2008 is of biblical proportion.)
Des Moines, Iowa — The severe flooding soaking the
Midwest and southern plains this week moved onto Iowa Wednesday, after
leaving large swaths of Ohio underwater Tuesday and a trail of deadly
destruction in its path.
The death toll from two storm systems — one in the Upper Midwest and the
remnants of Tropical Storm Erin in Texas and Oklahoma — reached 22 on
Tuesday when searchers found the body of a man tangled in a tree near
Lewiston, Minn. Officials in Iowa are still determining if a death in that
state can be attributed to the storm.
In Iowa, widespread flooding continued early Wednesday as thunderstorms
dumped more heavy rain across northern Iowa, which was already flooded from
earlier storms.
Residents walk through high water in Shelby, Ohio on
August 21, 2007.
Strong winds destroyed buildings, cut off power and left roads and homes
underwater.
Record flooding was predicted near Findlay in northwest Ohio, where the
Blanchard River was close to 7 feet above flood stage Wednesday morning and
likely to rise another half-foot or more, the weather service said.
In Wisconsin and Minnesota, thousands of homes were damaged. A preliminary
survey by the American Red Cross in Minnesota identified about 4,200
affected homes, including 256 complete losses, 338 with major damage and 475
that are still inaccessible, said Kris Eide, the state's director of
homeland security and emergency management.
IOWA FLOOD OF 2008
IOWA FLOOD JUNE 12, 2008
You can verify all the
Bible verses quoted on this website at Bible Gateway
Scientists at Oregon State University’s Hatfield Marine Science Center have
recorded more than 600 earthquakes in the last 10 days off the central
Oregon coast in an
area not typically known for a high degree of seismic activity.
(full story)
The National Weather Service called flooding in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, a
"historic hydrologic event" Thursday as the swollen river poured over its
banks at 500-year flood levels, forcing the evacuation of nearly 4,000
homes.
(full story)
Scientists at Oregon State University’s Hatfield Marine Science Center have
recorded more than 600 earthquakes in the last 10 days off the central
Oregon coast in an
area not typically known for a high degree of seismic activity.
(full story)