Rapid rainfall floods buildings and highways in Deep South

Aug 24, 2022, 8:28 PM | Updated: Aug 25, 2022, 3:42 pm
A view of the Biloxi River from a bridge on Three Rivers Road, Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022, in Harrison...

A view of the Biloxi River from a bridge on Three Rivers Road, Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022, in Harrison County, Miss. Water covers the banks and trunks of trees as the water level rises. (Justin Mitchell/The Sun Herald via AP)

(Justin Mitchell/The Sun Herald via AP)

              A view of the Biloxi River from a bridge on Three Rivers Road, Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022, in Harrison County, Miss. Water covers the banks and trunks of trees as the water level rises. (Justin Mitchell/The Sun Herald via AP)
            
              The waterfront neighborhood on River Road off of Three Rivers Road in Biloxi, Miss., has flood waters from the rising Biloxi River on Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022. The river is expected to crest at 14.5 feet on Friday morning. The flood height for the Biloxi River is 12 feet. (Justin Mitchell/The Sun Herald via AP)
            
              A workman's pickup truck splashes through flood waters in Richland, Miss., following a morning of torrential rains, Wednesday, Aug. 24, 2022. Heavy rains and flash flooding prompted rescue operations, closures and evacuations in the central part of the state. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)
            
              Tony Banks, 35, stands outside his apartment in Flowood, Miss., on Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022. His apartment complex, the Laurel Park Apartments, flooded Wednesday as a water overflowed from a nearby creek.  (AP Photo/Michael Goldberg)
            
              Joy Lester, 60, was alone in her store Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 cleaning up after flood water poured into the building Wednesday afternoon. The owner of The Outlet Store in Pearl, Miss, Lester says she will have to get rid of most of her merchandise, all of which is uninsured. (AP Photo/Michael Goldberg)
            
              The Exchange Church in Pearl, Miss, was flooded for the second time in four years Wednesday. Lead Pastor Bryant May spent the day Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 cleaning up the church's interior with volunteers after water poured into the building. (AP Photo/Michael Goldberg)
            
              In this photo provided by Pastor Bryant May, about three inches of water streamed into The Exchange Church in Pearl, Miss., Wednesday, Aug. 24, 2022, as flash floods pummeled the surrounding area. (Pastor Bryant May via AP)
            
              In this photo provided by Pastor Bryant May, The Exchange Church in Pearl, Miss., was flooded Wednesday, Aug. 24, 2022, after rain water poured into the building. Flash floods pummeled central Mississippi after three consecutive days of rain. (Pastor Bryant May via AP)
            
              Pastor Bryant May, right, of The Exchange Church talks to staff and volunteers as they clean up the building after it flooded, Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022, in Pearl, Miss. The group spent most of Thursday salvaging furniture and setting up fans to dry the carpeting. (AP Photo/Michael Goldberg)
            
              In this photo provided by Pastor Bryant May, rain water covered Bierdeman Road in Pearl, Miss., Wednesday, Ag. 24, 2022. Several buildings on the street were flooded, including an outlet store and a church. (Pastor Bryant May via AP)
            
              A workman's pickup truck splashes through flood waters in Richland, Miss., following a morning of torrential rains, Wednesday, Aug. 24, 2022. Heavy rains and flash flooding prompted rescue operations, closures and evacuations in the central part of the state. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)
            
              Tony Banks, 35, stands outside his apartment in Flowood, Miss., on Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022. His apartment complex, the Laurel Park Apartments, flooded Wednesday as a water overflowed from a nearby creek.  (AP Photo/Michael Goldberg)
            
              Joy Lester, 60, was alone in her store Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 cleaning up after flood water poured into the building Wednesday afternoon. The owner of The Outlet Store in Pearl, Miss, Lester says she will have to get rid of most of her merchandise, all of which is uninsured. (AP Photo/Michael Goldberg)
            
              The Exchange Church in Pearl, Miss, was flooded for the second time in four years Wednesday. Lead Pastor Bryant May spent the day Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 cleaning up the church's interior with volunteers after water poured into the building. (AP Photo/Michael Goldberg)
            
              In this photo provided by Pastor Bryant May, about three inches of water streamed into The Exchange Church in Pearl, Miss., Wednesday, Aug. 24, 2022, as flash floods pummeled the surrounding area. (Pastor Bryant May via AP)
            
              In this photo provided by Pastor Bryant May, The Exchange Church in Pearl, Miss., was flooded Wednesday, Aug. 24, 2022, after rain water poured into the building. Flash floods pummeled central Mississippi after three consecutive days of rain. (Pastor Bryant May via AP)
            
              Pastor Bryant May, right, of The Exchange Church talks to staff and volunteers as they clean up the building after it flooded, Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022, in Pearl, Miss. The group spent most of Thursday salvaging furniture and setting up fans to dry the carpeting. (AP Photo/Michael Goldberg)
            
              In this photo provided by Pastor Bryant May, rain water covered Bierdeman Road in Pearl, Miss., Wednesday, Ag. 24, 2022. Several buildings on the street were flooded, including an outlet store and a church. (Pastor Bryant May via AP)
            
              Tony Banks, 35, stands outside his apartment in Flowood, Miss., on Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022. His apartment complex, the Laurel Park Apartments, flooded Wednesday as a water overflowed from a nearby creek.  (AP Photo/Michael Goldberg)
            
              Tony Banks, 35, stands outside his apartment in Flowood, Miss., on Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022. His apartment complex, the Laurel Park Apartments, flooded Wednesday as a water overflowed from a nearby creek.  (AP Photo/Michael Goldberg)
            
              Flooding from heavy rains that have plagued the region in recent days is seen near the capitol in downtown Jackson, Miss., Wednesday, Aug. 24, 2022. (Hannah Mattix/The Clarion-Ledger via AP)
            
              Courtney Ingle looks around her grandmother's flooded bedroom at the Peach Tree Village nursing home, as she collects some of her possessions in Brandon, Miss., following a morning of torrential rains, Wednesday, Aug. 24, 2022. Heavy rains and flash flooding prompted rescue operations, closures and evacuations in the central part of the state. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)
            
              Courtney Ingle loads some of her grandmother's possessions into her truck Wednesday, Aug. 24, 2022, after floodwaters had receded at the Peach Tree Village nursing home where she lives in Brandon, Miss. Heavy rains and flash flooding prompted rescue operations, closures and evacuations in the central part of the state. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)
            
              A resident's relative walks through the Peach Tree Village nursing home to collect family possessions from the flooded facility in Brandon, Miss., following a morning of torrential rains, Wednesday, Aug. 24, 2022. Heavy rains and flash flooding prompted rescue operations, closures and evacuations in the central part of the state. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)
            
              A mailbox stands in floodwaters from heavy rains that have plagued the region in recent days on Foxboro Drive in northeast Jackson, Miss., Wednesday, Aug. 24, 2022. Torrential rains and flash flooding prompted rescue operations, closures and evacuations in the central part of the state. (Hannah Mattix/The Clarion-Ledger via AP)

PEARL, Miss. (AP) — Large fans hummed noisily Thursday to try to dry out the carpet at The Exchange Church, a day after storms rapidly dumped several inches of rain and pushed water into the one-story brick building in central Mississippi.

Bryant May is lead pastor of the Southern Baptist congregation in the Jackson suburb of Pearl. He said it was the second time in four years the church flooded. The church will conduct online services this weekend, and May said he hopes the building will be in working order soon after that.

“The good news in it is that we have a little bit of experience — that’s good news/bad news — so we have a little bit of a game plan on how to attack it,” May said Thursday.

Weather radar showed heavy rainfall Thursday in parts of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and in the Florida panhandle.

Several flash flood warnings were issued, and the Mississippi Department of Transportation reported water covering highways Thursday from the central part of the state down to the Gulf Coast. Flowing water washed away part of a state highway in rural Newton County, between Jackson and Meridian.

The National Weather Service predicted the Pearl River near Jackson, Mississippi, will crest early next week at nearly the level it reached during flooding in 2020. Emergency officials said residents in low-lying areas near the river should prepare for the possibility of evacuating in the next several days.

After Wednesday’s deluge caused creeks to overflow, law enforcement officers carried toddlers out of a flooded day care center in Florence, Mississippi, south of Jackson. The Rankin County Sheriff’s Department posted video on Facebook of deputies walking through brown, knee-deep water to take children to an elevated truck, placing them gently on benches.

Rankin County sheriff’s deputies also helped move more than 40 residents out of a flooded nursing home Wednesday in nearby Brandon.

Tony Banks said Thursday that when he returned to his apartment in the Jackson suburb of Flowood after work Wednesday, the parking lot was knee-deep in water. He said a creek overflowed, flooding some cars and trucks. Banks said he caught a fish near the vehicles.

“He was flopping around in the parking lot and I grabbed his mouth,” said Banks, 35. He said he tossed the bass back into the water.

In Alabama, vehicles traveling along flooded roads created boat-like wakes on low-lying Dauphin Island, a popular beach community off the coast, but police said the water was not deep enough Thursday morning to pose a major threat. Flooding was likely across southwestern Alabama through nightfall, forecasters said, and Mississippi temporarily closed a welcome station on Interstate 10 because of flooding.

A few schools around Mobile, Alabama, dismissed early because of flooding or power outages. The National Weather Service said rain was falling at a rate of as much as 3 inches (7.6 centimeters) an hour along the coast, and roads and parking lots were flooded in Foley on the eastern shore of Mobile Bay.

Joy Lester owns a second-hand store in Pearl, Mississippi, near The Exchange Church. She said she will have to throw away most of the couches, dining room sets and inventory that was soaked by flooding.

“All of this is just a waste. It’s got to go,” Lester said as she surveyed the damage Thursday.

Three Mississippi cities set one-day rainfall records Wednesday, the weather service said. Jackson received just over 5 inches (12.7 centimeters), Meridian received 4.6 inches (11.7 centimeters) and Vicksburg received 2.9 inches (7.4 centimeters).

On Wednesday, Jackson also surpassed its previous record for rainfall for the month of August, at 11.57 inches (29.4 centimeters). The previous record for the month was 11.51 inches (29.2 centimeters) in 2008, the weather service said.

The National Weather Service said flooding was expected near several rivers in central and southern Mississippi. The Pearl River was above flood stage in the Jackson area Thursday and was expected to continue rising. That means streams and creeks are unable to drain into the river, and water could threaten homes and businesses.

___

Associated Press writer Jay Reeves in Birmingham, Alabama, contributed to this report.

Copyright © The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Rapid rainfall floods buildings and highways in Deep South