Nashville mayor declares emergency after deadly flooding
Record torrential rainfall lashing Tennessee has flooded Nashville-area buildings and resulted in the deaths of at least four people, authorities said Sunday.
Details: Nashville Mayor John Cooper (D) told a briefing 7 inches of rain had fallen in two days in Nashville — the second-highest on record. Authorities told the briefing at least 130 people were rescued from the floods overnight.
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We send our deepest sympathies to the loved ones of the four Nashvillians who died in last night’s flooding. Metro’s first responders have worked tirelessly following the city’s second-highest ever two-day rainfall, which flooded neighborhoods across the county. pic.twitter.com/sTjGWs9YIf
— Mayor John Cooper (@JohnCooper4Nash) March 28, 2021
Cooper tweeted that he's signed an executive order "declaring a local state of emergency due to flooding" in the city. He's seeking state and federal resources to assist in the worst-affected area, Davidson County.
By the numbers: 5.75 inches of rain fell in Nashville on Saturday, making it the city's wettest March day on record, according to the National Weather Service (NWS).
The big picture: The flooding comes after powerful winds, rains, thunderstorms and hail that pummeled the Southeast last week, when deadly tornadoes struck Alabama and Georgia.
What to watch: While the rainfall has eased, flooding remains a real threat.
Per the NWS, the Cumberland River is forecast to peak at 49 feet by midnight Monday — 9 feet above the flood stage.
For the record: During the May 2010 floods that killed 36 people, the river crested at 51.86 feet, the Tennessean notes.
Posted by New Tribe Church on Sunday, March 28, 2021
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