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Kentucky Flood Death Toll Hits 28 as Rescuers Face More Rain

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This July 28, 2022 photo provided by Appalshop shows the flooded Appalshop building in Whitesburg, Ky. The cultural center, known for chronicling Appalachian life, is cleaning up and assessing its losses.
This July 28, 2022 photo provided by Appalshop shows the flooded Appalshop building in Whitesburg, Ky. The cultural center, known for chronicling Appalachian life, is cleaning up and assessing its losses.

Rescuers in Kentucky are taking the search effort door to door in worsening weather as they brace for a long, grueling effort to locate victims of flooding that devastated the state's east, the governor said Sunday.

Some areas in the mountainous region are still inaccessible following flooding that turned roads into rivers, washed out bridges, swept away houses and killed at least 28 people, according to state officials. Poor cell phone service is also complicating rescue efforts.

"This is one of the most devastating, deadly floods that we have seen in our history. … And at a time that we're trying to dig out, it's raining," Governor Andy Beshear told NBC's "Meet the Press."

"We're going to work to go door to door, work to find, again, as many people as we can. We're even going to work through the rain. But the weather is complicating it," Beshear said.

The number of dead in the flooding, caused by torrential rain that began on Wednesday, is expected to rise further.

"We're going to be finding bodies for weeks, many of them swept hundreds of yards, maybe a quarter mile-plus from where they were lost," Beshear said.

The governor toured flooded areas in three counties on Sunday. Across the rain-battered areas of the state, more than 350 people are living temporarily in shelters, he said.

In the town of Jackson, seat of hard-hit Breathitt County, state, local and federal rescue teams along with aid workers were gathering Sunday morning in a Walmart parking lot as they prepared to fan out.

Some were distributing bottles of water to those in need. A boat marked "FEMA Rescue 4" sat on a trailer, indicating the presence of federal emergency crews.

Receding floodwaters had left a thick coating of dust on the streets as an ominously dark cloud cover presaged more rain ahead.

FILE - A flooded area is flown over by a Kentucky National Guard helicopter deployed in response to a declared state of emergency in eastern Kentucky, July 27, 2022. (US Army National Guard/Handout via Reuters)
FILE - A flooded area is flown over by a Kentucky National Guard helicopter deployed in response to a declared state of emergency in eastern Kentucky, July 27, 2022. (US Army National Guard/Handout via Reuters)

The floods hit a region of Kentucky that was suffering from grinding poverty — driven by the decline of the coal industry that was the heart of its economy — taking everything from people who could least afford it.

"It wiped out areas where people didn't have that much to begin with," Beshear said.

Some areas in eastern Kentucky had reported receiving more than 20 centimeters of rain in a 24-hour period.

The water level of the North Fork of the Kentucky River at Whitesburg rose to a staggering 6 meters within hours, well above its previous record of 4.5 meters.

The National Weather Service's Weather Prediction Center warned of the potential for flooding across a swath of the United States, including central and eastern Kentucky, into Monday.

"The threat of flash flooding will continue through the afternoon and early evening hours from showers and thunderstorms with very heavy rainfall rates," it said in a forecast.

President Joe Biden has issued a disaster declaration for the Kentucky flooding, allowing federal aid to supplement state and local recovery efforts.

The eastern Kentucky flooding is the latest in a series of extreme weather events that scientists say are an unmistakable sign of climate change.

Nearly 60 people were killed in western Kentucky by a tornado in December 2021, a disaster that Beshear said informed the current efforts on the other end of the state.

"We learned a lot of lessons in western Kentucky on those devastating tornados about seven months ago, so we are providing as much support as we can and we are moving fast from all over the state to help out," he told CNN on Saturday.

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