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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:2019_Midwestern_U.S._floods
rdf:type
owl:Thing
rdfs:label
2019 Midwestern U.S. floods
rdfs:comment
The Midwestern United States experienced major floods in the spring of 2019, primarily along the Missouri River and its tributaries in Nebraska, Missouri, South Dakota, Iowa, and Kansas. The Mississippi River also saw flooding, although starting later and ending earlier. The 2019 January-to-May period was the wettest on record for the U.S., with multiple severe weather outbreaks through May in the Midwest, High Plains, and South exacerbating the flooding and causing additional damage. Throughout late May and early June, rain in Iowa, Illinois, and Missouri caused every site on the Mississippi River to record a top-five crest. At least three people in Iowa and Nebraska died.
rdfs:seeAlso
dbr:Mississippi_River_floods_of_2019
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2019
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n5:Team_Offutt_battling_flood_waters_190317-F-IT794-1052.jpg n5:Historic_floods_have_inundated_Nebraska_(40463013783).jpg n5:Flood_of_2019-_Rocheport,_MO.jpg
dcterms:subject
dbc:Floods_in_the_United_States dbc:2019_natural_disasters_in_the_United_States dbc:Natural_disasters_in_Missouri dbc:Natural_disasters_in_Nebraska dbc:2019_floods dbc:Midwestern_United_States dbc:Natural_disasters_in_Iowa dbc:Missouri_River_floods dbc:March_2019_events_in_the_United_States
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1092398478
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n5:Historic_floods_have_inundated_Nebraska_(40463013783).jpg?width=300
dbp:affected
dbr:Midwestern_United_States
dbp:caption
March 2018 and March 2019 side-by-side comparison of the Omaha–Council Bluffs metropolitan area showing effects of flooding of the Platte and Missouri Rivers.
dbp:damages
2.9E9
dbp:date
2019-09-22
dbp:duration
March 2019 – December 2019
dbp:fatalities
3
dbp:url
n7:
dbo:abstract
The Midwestern United States experienced major floods in the spring of 2019, primarily along the Missouri River and its tributaries in Nebraska, Missouri, South Dakota, Iowa, and Kansas. The Mississippi River also saw flooding, although starting later and ending earlier. The 2019 January-to-May period was the wettest on record for the U.S., with multiple severe weather outbreaks through May in the Midwest, High Plains, and South exacerbating the flooding and causing additional damage. Throughout late May and early June, rain in Iowa, Illinois, and Missouri caused every site on the Mississippi River to record a top-five crest. At least three people in Iowa and Nebraska died. Nearly 14 million people in the midwestern and southern states were affected by the flooding, which the New York Times called "The Great Flood of 2019". New record river levels were set in 42 different locations. Although $12 billion in aid was made "available to farmers who lost money due to the trade war" the previous year, Reuters reported that the USDA had "no program to cover the catastrophic and largely uninsured stored-crop losses from the widespread flooding." In Nebraska, under the banner “Nebraska Strong”, private fundraisers popped up across the state to help ease the financial strain, as well as offers to donate supplies, house livestock, or donate farming supplies lost. The largest private fundraiser came from Alex Stepanek of St. Paul, Nebraska who raised $241,756 through a Facebook fundraiser. After seeing a post he created bringing attention to the devastation across the state go viral around the world, he created the fundraiser and by the following day had over $100,000. The money was distributed throughout 5 towns, 5 counties, four families who had loved ones die in the flood, and the largest chunk (1/3) went to the Nebraska Farm Bureau to go directly to agriculture and farmer needs. At least 1 million acres of U.S. farmland, in nine major grain producing states flooded. On September 17, 2019, a third round of flooding along the Missouri River was considered likely, due to heavy rains of up to "four times what is normal in parts of Montana, North and South Dakota and Nebraska." On October 28, 2019, it was predicted that the prolonged Missouri River flooding, which lasted as long as seven months in some locations, could continue all winter, with no end in sight. On December 16, 2019, the prolonged Missouri River flooding in the Kansas City district was declared officially over.
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