LITTLE ROCK, May 30 — Thousands of Arkansas and Oklahoma residents braced for more flooding yesterday and some evacuated their homes, as forecasts of more rain drove fears that decades-old levees girding the Arkansas River may not hold.

More than a week of violent weather, including downpours and deadly tornadoes, has devastated the central United States, bringing record-breaking floods in parts of the two states, turning highways into lakes and submerging all but the roofs of some homes.

“This is a flood of historic magnitude,” Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson told a news conference on Wednesday, joined by state emergency officials and officials from the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Of the Arkansas River, he said: “It's a beautiful sight until it comes to get you.”

Flooding has already closed 12 state highways, the governor said, and 400 households have agreed to voluntary evacuations.

Advertisement

More heavy downpours were forecast through last night over much of the two states, with between 2.5 and 7.6 cm expected, Patrick Burke, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service's (NWS) Weather Prediction Center, said in an interview.

By early June, rivers are expected to crest to the highest levels on record all the way down to Little Rock, Arkansas, Burke said.

In Tulsa, Oklahoma's second largest city, Mayor GT Bynum warned that the city's 70-year-old levees were being tested “in a way that they have never been before.”

Advertisement

So far, he said, the 32 km levee system, which protects some 10,000 people, was working as designed and being patrolled around the clock by the Oklahoma National Guard.

Staff at the Harvest Church West Tulsa, which sits behind a levee a few blocks from the Arkansas River, moved furniture and sound and office equipment from the basement to the church's second floor and relocated staff out of the neighbourhood.

“For levees that are 70 years old, they're holding well but they're not designed to hold the pressure this long, which is what the fear is at this point,” Chuck Barrineau, the church's lead pastor, said in a phone interview. He said a colleague was spending yesterday gathering cleaning supplies and canned goods to distribute to neighbours as needed.

At least six people have died as a result of the latest round of flooding and storms in Oklahoma, according to the state's Department of Health.

A plague of extreme weather has upended life in the region, with more than 300 tornadoes touching down in the Midwest in the last two weeks.

Several tornadoes touched down on Tuesday evening in Kansas, damaging homes, uprooting trees and ripping down power lines, according to the NWS. Tornadoes also pulverised buildings in western Ohio, killing one person and injuring scores of others. — Reuters