At least eight people have died from flooding in eastern Kentucky, according to Gov. Andy Beshear, who said he expects more deaths.
Beshear said it could be one of the “most significant, deadly floods” that the area has ever experienced.
Portions of eastern Kentucky received more than 8 inches of rain from Wednesday into Thursday morning — overwhelming creeks, streams and ground already saturated from previous rain, according to the National Weather Service.
Scientists say the human-caused climate crisis is worsening extreme weather around the globe. Warmer air holds more water, which means more dangerous flooding, according to the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
April Stivers, 38, of Lost Creek, Kentucky, takes a moment to herself at Hazard Community & Technical College on July 28, where people displaced by flooding are being taken for shelter.
(Michael Swensen/Getty Images)
Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear says at least eight people have died due to significant flooding in eastern Kentucky.
Beshear told WLEX that he does not have a firm total on the number of people missing at this time because rescue crews are still working to access certain areas where water is flowing.
“Tonight, we need your continued prayers for the people of Eastern Kentucky. This is an ongoing natural disaster, with more rain expected tonight that could worsen the situation. The death toll has heartbreakingly risen to 8 Kentuckians lost,” Beshear said in a tweet Thursday.
In a video statement, Beshear called the flooding in Eastern Kentucky “historic,” adding that 20 to 30 people have been air rescued thanks to the National Guard, according to a statement.
“Our folks on the ground from fish and wildlife to National Guard to state police to local emergency management. They are fighting so hard to reach people, but this is so widespread,” the governor told WLEX.
CNN’s Jennifer Feldman contributed to this report.
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Kentucky governor: This is the "worst flooding disaster at least of my lifetime"
From CNN's Dave Alsup
A group of stranded people are rescued from the floodwaters of the North Fork of the Kentucky River in Jackson, Kentucky on July 28.
(Leandro Lozada/AFP/Getty Images)
Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear called Thursday’s fatal flooding event the worst of his lifetime.
“Well, this is by far the worst flooding disaster at least of my lifetime in Kentucky,” he said in an interview with NBC Nightly News anchor Lester Holt.
He continued:
Earlier today, Beshear said least eight people have died from flooding in eastern Kentucky. He also said he expects more deaths.
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Kentucky family's home washed away by flash floods: "Everything I had was completely underwater"
From CNN's Sharif Paget
(Courtesy Belinda Asher)
Belinda Asher, 37, was sleeping in her home in eastern Kentucky when she was awoken at 1:15 a.m. by a flash flood alert on her phone. In the next 45 minutes, her entire life changed.
Asher, who lives in the Perry-Breathitt County line with her husband and three children, described the flooding as a “war zone.” Her family who lives in the area and her neighbors were also not spared by the rising water.
“I know of at least 10 to 15 families within a one-mile stretch who lost everything that they have,” Asher said.
Asher told CNN that her three-bedroom home got washed away by the flash flooding.
“The whole thing is just gone. I think I saw my porch in the creek when we were leaving, and I saw a part of the door frame,” she said.
Her brother’s home also got hit, she added. “The foundation is still there, but the house is gone.”
According to Belinda Asher, her brother's home was swept away and what remained was the foundation.
(Courtesy Belinda Asher)
Asher’s truck got washed away, and her car currently sits underwater. “We tried to get it to higher ground in the 40, 45 minutes we had, but had no luck,” she said.
“We had to evacuate immediately once the water started rising,” Asher said. “We went to the barn, because instinctively we tried to save anything that is living, and at the end, we got the horses out,” she said.
(Courtesy Belinda Asher)
She also managed to save her dogs. Still missing is a cat she hopes turns up in the next couple of days.
Asher and her immediate family are currently staying with her brother-in-law in the city of Hazard. She’s fortunate to have made it out alive with her family and pets — and credits the flash flood alert on her phone for saving their lives — but said she lost everything and doesn’t know what to do.
“I have no plan, I don’t know, how do you start from zero,” she said.
A GoFundMe has been set up by a friend to help Asher’s family get back on their feet.
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Floyd County official says about 80 people have been rescued countywide due to flooding
From CNN’s Amanda Musa
A car is submerged in floodwaters along Right Beaver Creek, following a day of heavy rain in Garrett, Kentucky, on July 28.
(Pat McDonogh/USA Today Network/Reuters)
Robbie Williams, judge/executive for Floyd County in Kentucky, told CNN Thursday that his county has seen a significant amount of rainfall that has resulted in flooding, particularly in the western and southern parts of the county.
Williams says around 80 people have been rescued across Floyd County since Tuesday, with 50 to 60 of those rescues happening in the western part of the county, in Maytown and Wayland.
About 6 to 7 inches of rain fell in western Floyd County during a four-hour time frame, early Thursday morning, Williams said.
Williams says he is hopeful that there has been no loss of life in Floyd County and has not heard of any people that are unaccounted for.
“One good thing about this area, we all know our neighbors and we know who we have to help,” Williams said.
Williams also tells CNN that he believes at least a thousand 911 calls have been made since heavy rains started on Tuesday, with hundreds of calls made Thursday.
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Biden has been briefed on Kentucky flooding, White House says
From CNN's Sam Fossum
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said President Biden has been briefed on the storms and widespread flooding in Kentucky, which has damaged homes and communities, left thousands without water and power, and led to the deaths of at least three people.
She added that Criswell will travel to Kentucky Friday to survey damage and “report back to President Biden who has been briefed on the situation.” Jean-Pierre added that a FEMA incident management team has been dispatched.
“We are grateful for the heroic work of first responders and would urge everyone impacted in impacted areas to please listen to their state and local officials and follow their guidance,” she said.
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Eastern Kentucky is flooding while other places are experiencing flash droughts. Here's why
From CNN's Judson Jones, Monica Garrett, Payton Major and Angela Fritz
Pam Boling surveys the damage to her home from floodwaters in Wayland, Kentucky, following a day of heavy rain on July 28.
(Pat McDonogh/USA Today Network)
At least three people have died in flooding hitting eastern Kentucky on Thursday, with state officials warning there could be more deaths coming as rescue efforts continue.
At the same time, in other parts of the US, flash drought conditions are intensifying across the southern Plains, according to the latest US Drought Monitor released Thursday morning.
“Temperatures across the region were generally 2-8 degrees warmer than normal, with the warmest readings occurring in Oklahoma, Texas, northern Arkansas, and the western half of Tennessee,” the US Drought Monitor wrote.
Hot and dry weather also covered south-central and southwest Missouri, where flash drought intensified and agricultural problems continued.
This rainfall, and now the flooding in Kentucky, has created a sharp contrast across the state between absolutely no drought in the north and extreme drought across the southern portion of the state.
This is the inherent nature of the climate crisis: There will be more extremes on both ends of the spectrum — flooding and drought. This week has shown they can happen at the same time in close proximity.
Climate change is on course to transform life on Earth as we know it, and unless global warming is dramatically slowed, billions of people and other species will reach points where they can no longer adapt to the new normal, according to a major UN-backed report, based on years of research from hundreds of scientists said.
The report, published in February, found that the impacts from human-caused climate change were larger than previously thought. The report’s authors say these impacts are happening much faster and are more disruptive and widespread than scientists expected 20 years ago.
Around half of the world’s population experiences severe water scarcity each year in part due to climate-related factors, the report showed. Water will become even more scarce at higher global temperatures.
At 2 degrees of warming — which scientists predict the planet will reach by midcentury — as many as three billion people around the world will experience “chronic water scarcity,” according to the report. It increases to four billion people at 4 degrees.
Water shortages will put enormous pressure on food production and increase the world’s already dire food-security challenges.
Keep reading about how we are running out of ways to adapt.
CNN’s Rachel Ramirez contributed reporting to this post.
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Here's where to find flood shelters and other resources in eastern Kentucky
Members of the Winchester, Kentucky, Fire Department walk inflatable boats across flood waters over Kentucky State Road 15 in Jackson, Kentucky, to pick up people stranded on Thursday, July 28.
(Timothy D. Easley/AP)
Dangerous flooding in eastern Kentucky have killed at least three people and displaced dozens, if not hundreds, more. Gov. Andy Beshear said it will be “one of the most significant, deadly floods” in the commonwealth’s history.
“Hundreds will lose their homes, and this is going to be yet another event (where) it’s going to take not months, but likely years, for many families to rebuild and recover,” Beshear said in an earlier news conference Thursday morning.
As various agencies, including the National Guard, help with search and rescue efforts, the state is making sure resources are available to those impacted in the community.
Pine Mountain, Buckhorn Lake and Jennie Wiley state parks are open for those who lost their homes, according to the Kentucky Chamber of Commerce website.
Here are some other places that have opened as shelters:
Beshear urged people to donate water and cleaning supplies, according to the Chamber of Commerce website.
For those missing a loved one in the affected counties, officials are urging people to call the Kentucky State Police, not 911.
“DO NOT call 911 to report missing persons, and keep calling the KSP line as KSP is experiencing many calls at this time,” it says on the chamber’s website.
Here are the numbers to call the designed post based on county, according to the KSP:
Here’s what to include when you call, according to the KSP:
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"Praying for the water to start going down": Couple describes trying to save their home from flooding
From CNN's Sara Smart
(Glenda Looney)
When flooding started to ramp up in Elkhorn City, Kentucky, Glenda Looney and her husband sprang into action to save their home.
“We started putting stuff upstairs and on top of anything we could,” Looney told CNN, “We sat on the porch praying for the water to start going down,”
Looney said water got close to a foot deep in their laundry room.
“Water started seeping through the floors and carpet,” she said.
Floors in eight of their eleven rooms were soaked with water, so the couple are now ripping up their carpets.
Some background: The rains have caused untold damage to homes in the state’s slice of central Appalachia and forced some residents to the roofs of their swamped homes to await rescue, Gov. Andy Beshear said on Thursday.
Beshear activated the National Guard to help with rescues and recovery and declared an emergency to expedite resources to help, he said.
The National Weather Service said new storms are forecast to develop tonight and last into tomorrow and a flood watch remains in effect until late Friday evening over the hardest hit areas in the state.
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Storms are expected again tonight and tomorrow over Kentucky, National Weather Service says
From CNN’s Dave Hennen and Payton Major
A truck drives along flooded Wolverine Road in Breathitt County, Kentucky, on Thursday, July 28.
(Ryan C. Hermens/Lexington Herald-Leader/AP)
Several areas around Hazard, Kentucky, have received over 9 inches of rain over the last 24 hours, according to radar estimates and observations in the area.
Radar is showing that most of the rain has now moved east of the area, but new storms are forecast to develop tonight and last into tomorrow and a flood watch remains in effect until late Friday evening over the hardest hit areas.
According to National Weather Service, additional rainfall amounts of over an inch are expected from now through tomorrow evening.
The best chance for additional rainfall will come tomorrow from 6 a.m. through 6 p.m. ET. Weather improvement is expected over the weekend. “We should see dry weather start to move back into the area as we move into Saturday for most locations,” Dustin added.
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Tight-knit community uses boats, kayaks and jet skis to rescue neighbors
From CNN's Sara Smart
(Zach Caudill)
Community members in Whitesburg, Kentucky, are doing what they can to help each other after flooding devastated the area.
Zach Caudill told CNN that while his home has a few inches of flooding, some of his friends lost their entire homes.
“I have several friends staying with me that lost their homes completely,” he said.
Caudill says there is no cell phone service anywhere in the area. He and others are now assisting others in the community in any way they can.
Caudill said he grabbed bandages, gauze, medicine, menstrual supplies, food, water and blankets from his home to take to others.
“Everyone was there trying to lend a hand and help. That’s how tight-knit our community is,” Caudill said. “When one of us hurts, we all hurt.”
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Neighboring states provide helicopters with hoisting capabilities to Kentucky
From CNN’s Michelle Watson
West Virginia and Tennessee will send aircraft with hoisting capabilities to assist with flooding in Kentucky, Maj. Gen. Hal Lamberton, said in a news conference Thursday.
The hoisting aircrafts are helpful for lifting people off rooftops, Lamberton said.
Some background: The state’s National Guard has at least four aircraft conducting rescue missions in the affected areas but due to limited aircraft with hoisting capabilities. Kentucky Guard MEDVAC crews were also mobilized on Thursday morning, according to a tweet. Lt. Col. Stephen Martin, the AAAF commander, said the Guard launched “‘multiple aircraft to support for hoist & rescue operations’”
A FEMA response team is expected to be in Kentucky by Thursday night, Gov. Andy Beshear said.
And while state police are helping search for people, the troopers are also impacted by floodwaters, Beshear added.
Read the tweet:
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Kentucky governor says FEMA team is on its way, but conditions and power outages are hindering rescue efforts
From CNN’s Michelle Watson
A car is submerged in floodwaters along Right Beaver Creek, in Garrett, Kentucky, following a day of heavy rain.
(Pat McDonogh/USA Today Network/Reuters)
Widespread water and power outages continue to hamper Kentucky’s recovery efforts, Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear said in a Thursday news conference.
“In a word, this event is devastating,” Beshear said about the flooding. “This isn’t just a disaster, it is an ongoing natural disaster – we are in the midst of it.”
About 25,000 residents are now in the dark, and power outages are expected to increase, the governor said.
“I do believe it will end up being one of the most significant deadly floods that we have had in Kentucky, in at least a very long time,” Beshear said.
A Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) response team is expected to be in Kentucky by Thursday night, the governor said.
While state police are helping search for people, the troopers are also impacted by floodwaters, Beshear added.
The state’s National Guard has at least four aircraft conducting rescue missions in the affected areas, but there is limited aircraft with hoisting capabilities. Beshear said he reached out to West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice and was able to get two more aircrafts.
Beshear said the threat of rain wasn’t over.
Beshear encouraged people to stay safe, move from areas prone to flooding and check in on their loved ones.
“I don’t want to lose anybody else,” he said.
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Scientists say climate change is amplifying extreme weather events, such as Kentucky's floods
From CNN's John Keefe and Curt Merrill
Homes are flooded by Lost Creek, Kentucky, on Thursday, July 28.
(Ryan C. Hermens/Lexington Herald-Leader/AP)
Kentucky has been dealing with deadly, widespread flooding on Thursday — an extreme weather event that scientists say is being amplified by climate change.
Rainfall over land has become more intense since the 1980s, according to the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). The report’s authors say human influence is the main driver.
Human-caused fossil fuel emissions have warmed the planet a little more than 1 degree Celsius, on average, with more intense warming over land areas. Scientists are increasingly confident in the role that the climate crisis plays in extreme weather, and have warned that these events will become more intense and more dangerous with every fraction of a degree of warming.
This happens because warmer air can hold more water, the report said, adding that more water vapor in the atmosphere means more moisture available to fall as rain, which leads to higher rainfall rates and higher, more dangerous, more widespread flash flooding.
Heavy precipitation will become more frequent and more intense with every degree of warming, the report concludes.
Other extreme storms: Monsoon rains are expected to be devastating in coming years, especially in South and Southeast Asia, East Asia and West Africa. They will also become more variable: extremely wet years with frequent floods may be interspersed with very dry years featuring drought and extreme heat.
The “weather whiplash” which will become increasingly common as climate change intensifies the global water cycle.
Additionally, the report’s authors said the increase in tropical storm intensity the last 40 years can’t be explained by natural causes alone — and that humans are a contributing factor through global warming.
Scientists predict these storms will get worse as the world warms.
Hurricanes typhoons and cyclones will become more intense, top wind speeds will increase and — because of rising sea level — coastal flooding will be more extensive, the report warns.
Kentucky senators say they are keeping the families impacted by flooding in their prayers
From CNN’s Michelle Watson
GOP Kentucky Sens. Mitch McConnell and Rand Paul said they are sending prayers to those impacted by the flooding in eastern Kentucky.
“My prayers are with the families in Eastern Kentucky facing heavy floods, mudslides, and power outages this week,” McConnell said in a tweet. “My team is in close contact with local officials and I’m ready to provide any help I can. Thank you to the first responders who are helping Kentuckians stay safe.”
Paul said he and his wife are ready to offer any assistance.
“Kelley and I are sending prayers to those in Eastern Kentucky following last night’s horrific flooding. My team is here to help,” Paul said.
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About a dozen bridges are washed out in Perry County
From CNN’s Amanda Watts
About a dozen bridges across Perry County have been washed out due to flooding in eastern Kentucky, the city of Hazard said in an update on Facebook.
The National Guard is currently in Perry County helping with rescues, according to the statement.
The North Fork Kentucky River is expected to crest over Dipsy Doodle Curve in Hazard, the city noted, which it said is normal during flooding events.
In Hazard, all city roads are currently open, but residents are urged to stay off them unless necessary.
“It’s bad today and it’s going to be bad tomorrow. When the rivers and creeks go down the real work begins. Perry Countians are resilient, and we help each other. We always will,” the city said.
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More than 24,000 customers are without power in Kentucky
From CNN's Michelle Watson
More than 24,000 customers in Kentucky are without power this morning after up to eight inches of rainfall battered the state overnight, according to poweroutage.us.
Knott County is the hardest-hit, with more than 8,000 customers in the dark.
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At least 3 dead from Kentucky flooding, governor says, with death toll expected to climb
From CNN’s Michelle Watson
Van Jackson checks on his dog, Jack, who was stranded at a church by flood waters along Right Beaver Creek, in Garrett, Kentucky, on Thursday, July 28.
(Pat McDonogh/USA Today Network/Reuters)
The death toll from severe flooding in eastern Kentucky has grown to three, Gov. Andy Beshear said in a news conference on Thursday.
“The toughest update this morning is we have our first set of confirmed deaths,” Beshear said.
An 81-year-old woman from Perry County has died, according to Beshear.
Perry County Chief Deputy Coroner Jeffrey Combs told CNN that the woman had been missing since 1 a.m. ET, and authorities had to travel half a mile by boat and walk about a mile by foot to reach her.
Officials are not releasing the name of the woman at this time, Combs said. Many of the roadways in the county are inaccessible, Combs added.
The two other deaths were residents of Perry and Knott counties, according to the governor.
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Kentucky river rises over 5 feet above record levels
Since midnight eastern time, the Carr Creek Lake near Sassafras, Kentucky, rose over 15 feet, according to a USGS gauge.
Note: This data is preliminary and will need to be reviewed by the USGS and NWS. During flooding situations of this caliber, items can become stuck to the gauge and give false readings.
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Kentucky flooding forced some to wait for rescue on roofs, according to governor
From CNN's Jason Hanna and Michelle Watson
Home and structures are flooded near Quicksand, Kentucky, on Thursday, July 28.
(Ryan C. Hermens/Lexington Herald-Leader/AP)
Eastern Kentucky is enduring “one of the worst, most devastating flooding events” in the commonwealth’s history Thursday after heavy overnight rains caused untold damage and forced some residents to the roofs of their swamped homes to await rescue, Gov. Andy Beshear said.
“We expect the loss of life. Hundreds will lose their homes, and this is going to be yet another event (where) it’s going to take not months, but likely years, for many families to rebuild and recover,” Beshear said in a news conference Thursday morning in Frankfort.
Portions of eastern Kentucky received more than 8 inches of rain from Wednesday into Thursday morning, overwhelming creeks, streams and ground already saturated from previous rain, the National Weather Service said. Flood and flash flood warnings are in effect for portions of eastern Kentucky into Thursday afternoon.
The National Guard has identified people stuck on roofs, and was “making preparations to go in and withdraw them,” the state’s adjutant general, Maj. Gen. Hal Lamberton, said at the news conference, without detailing where these people were.