Flooding prompts debate between Missouri farmers and Illinois residents

Flooding prompts debate between Missouri farmers and Illinois residents
Danny Brown walks through his flooded backyard Wednesday in Cairo, Illinois. Getty Images/Whitney Curtis
Flooding prompts debate between Missouri farmers and Illinois residents
Danny Brown walks through his flooded backyard Wednesday in Cairo, Illinois. Getty Images/Whitney Curtis

Flooding prompts debate between Missouri farmers and Illinois residents

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The Army Corps of Engineers is waiting to decide if it will intentionally break a levee to help relieve flooding problems in a Southern Illinois town. But farmers in Missouri are objecting to the plan.

Flooding in Cairo, Illinois is so bad, more than 100 people have been evacuated. It’s a town of 2,800 residents at the southern tip of Illinois between the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers.

“I’m 50 years old, and I can’t recall seeing it higher before,” said Sheila Simon, Illinois’ lieutenant governor.

She said she hopes the water levels start to go down, or else the Army Corps might have to poke holes in a Mississippi River levee near Cairo.

But farmers in Missouri say that would flood their land and ruin crops. In a statement, Blake Hurst, the head of the Missouri Farm Bureau, said 130,000 acres of farmland could be destroyed.

Missouri has filed a lawsuit to block efforts to break the levee. A court hearing is scheduled for Thursday.