The sacrifice that these people are making is for the greater good.
--Jim Pogue, Army Corps of Engineers, speaking to CNN affiliate KPLR about people in Missouri farmland flooded by the intentional breach of a levee on the Mississippi River
See more coverage from CNN affilate KPLR.
(CNN) -- An engorged Mississippi river spilled out onto huge swaths of farmland in the American South and Midwest on Wednesday, creating massive flooding from Minnesota to Louisiana.
Heavy rains spawned flooding that meteorologists say is not expected to fully relent until early June. Areas along the Ohio River Basin also experienced heavy flooding as residents evacuated low-lying areas across the region.
The final crevasse, or break, in the Birds Point-New Madrid levee should be opened by Wednesday night, according to a statement from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Earlier,
vibram fivefinger bikila, the Corps intentionally breached the levee on the Mississippi River, helping ease unprecedented flood pressure on other areas.
The Ohio River level had dropped about 1.7 feet at Cairo, Illinois, since Monday afternoon, before the blast, but that is expected to level off later on Wednesday.
The breach, created when engineers detonated explosives late Monday night at Birds Point, Missouri, is sending 396,000 cubic feet per second of water onto 200 square miles of fertile Missouri farmland.
The water is coursing across a floodway that Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon described as "literally the most productive part of our continent."
Farmer Bryan Feezor said the sight makes you "sick to your stomach" as he surveyed his submerged fields.
"Farming is all I ever have done ... and it's under water," he told CNN affiliate KPLR. "I really don't know (what I'm going to do)."
A second levee blast was conducted Tuesday afternoon at New Madrid, Missouri, and a third is planned Wednesday near Hickman, Kentucky. The second and third blasts, downstream of Birds Point, will allow floodwater to return to the Mississippi River.
While the plan appeared to be working -- the level of the Ohio River fell where it joins the Mississippi -- record crests and relentless pressure from millions of gallons of water still threatened communities throughout the Mississippi and Ohio river valleys.
Vicksburg, Mississippi, could see water levels rise 4 feet by Sunday. Authorities told residents of Caruthersville, Missouri, that sandbags may not be enough to control the water.
Corina Jolley, of Sikeston, Missouri, told CNN she grew up in Dorena,
vibram bikila womens, Missouri, which she said was being inundated by the breach on the Mississippi River.
A tombstone rests above the remains of her father and uncle, but "I'm sure we'll never see it again," said Jolley, who claims residents of the rich farmland will be out of luck, as opposed to those in Cairo, Illinois,
5 Finger shoes, for whom the risk has been lessened by the breaches.
"Whoever thought it would be this bad?" she said.
The situation was especially perilous for a 93-year-old woman who was caught in the swollen waters of the Black River near Poplar Bluff, where two members of the Missouri National Guard rescued her from a partially submerged car.
"We weren't there to be heroes," said Sgt. Tim Bridges. "We were just doing our jobs."
Bridges, along with Spc. Junior Bombard, waded through the rushing, muddy waters to ferry the woman to safety.
This "is the reason why I signed up for the Guard," said Spc. Junior Bombard.
The town of Cairo remained under a mandatory evacuation despite the intentional breach, while six other communities were under voluntary evacuation notices, said Patti Thompson, spokeswoman for the Illinois Emergency Management Agency.
"We're definitely not out of the woods yet," she said. "The levees are all very saturated right now and they're going to continue to have a lot of pressure on them for several days."
Even with the levee breach, the National Weather Service continues to predict record or near-record flooding in parts of southern Illinois, southwest Indiana, western Kentucky and Tennessee, southeastern Missouri, northeastern Arkansas, and parts of Mississippi and Louisiana.
Arkansas police are searching for a man missing since he tried to drive through floodwater Tuesday morning. Carl Hess drove around barricades that blocked Highway 236, Sheriff Jim Roberson told CNN affiliate KATV. Hess called his wife at 7:19 a.m. (8:19 a.m. ET) and told her he was "in neck-deep water," Roberson said. Hess has not been seen since.
A host of rescue workers and volunteers searched the water along that section of highway, looking for the missing man. But the water was 3 feet to 5 feet deep along the road, Roberson said, and even deeper off the roadway.
"It's strong water and we certainly don't want to lose anyone else," Roberson said. "So we're being very careful where we go and what we do."
The decision to breach the Birds Point-New Madrid levee was controversial. Missouri officials took the Corps to court over the plan,
vibram finger shoes, questioning the agency's authority to intentionally breach the levee. The state argued the floodwater would deposit silt on the 130,000-some acres, and years, along with millions of dollars, would be required to fix the damage.
Maj. Gen. Michael Walsh, commander of the Corps' Mississippi River Valley Division, made the decision to order the breach. He warned that without punching a hole in the levee, massive flooding would threaten to inundate communities throughout the Mississippi and Ohio river valleys.
"There's a tremendous amount of pressure on the system," he told reporters Tuesday evening. "The project operated as designed."
The U.S. Supreme Court declined to intervene in the case on Sunday, clearing the way for Walsh to blow the levee.
Some Missouri residents were angered by the decision, saying it would destroy their communities and provide questionable benefit. But others felt the decision was for the best.
"Yeah, we lost 135,000 acres of farm land here in Missouri," said Sikeston, Missouri, resident Patricia Mobely, who recently fled the drought and firestorms of Texas for what she thought would be a more peaceful life in the Midwest. "But how much more would we have lost if we hadn't done it?"
"The sacrifice that these people are making is for the greater good," Jim Pogue with the Army Corps of Engineers told KPLR. "Their sacrifices are going to benefit hundreds of thousands of people all through this region. It's not just Cairo. It's people all through this part of the country."
Walsh called the decision to inundate the farmland and about 100 homes "heart-wrenching."
"I've been involved with flooding for 10 years and it takes a long time to recover from something like this," he said.
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