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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Most levees holding

Missouri River not expected to start dropping until this fall

Statues of workers of various trades, part of the Monument for Labor by Matthew J. Placzek, stand in rising waters of the Missouri River, in Omaha, Neb., Wednesday. (Associated Press)
Associated Press

HAMBURG, Iowa – The surge of water released from dams holding back the rain-swollen upper Missouri River reached deeper into Nebraska and Iowa on Thursday, headed swiftly toward Missouri and a soggy summer.

Almost all the levees along the way have held strong. There have been no significant injuries or deaths. Now comes the weeks of fretting and worry over whether levees in several states will continue to hold until the river starts to drop sometime this fall.

“The ongoing threat will be to the levees, which were designed to hold back water for a short period of time,” said Derek Hill, administrator of Iowa’s Homeland Security agency. “We don’t know how they will perform if the water level remains high for several months.”

Water from one levee breach, five miles south of the small town of Hamburg, Iowa, reached the partially evacuated community late Wednesday. There were no immediate problems with Hamburg’s new 8-foot-tall backup levee, which officials scrambled to build during the past two weeks.

In Omaha, officials announced Thursday an evacuation plan for the unlikely possibility of widespread flooding in Nebraska’s biggest city. Officials said roughly 2,700 Omaha residents would have to evacuate in that worse-case scenario.