Missouri farmers are placing blame on the federal government’s management of rivers and reservoirs for massive flooding that has hit the Midwest.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers manages the Missouri River and its upstream reservoirs letting water collect and flow as the season and conditions demand.
The agency is also responsible for protecting the habitats of endangered species that live in and around the Missouri River.
When operating the reservoir, the agency misjudges the amount of water that should be released and prioritizes the welfare of endangered animals over the communities that live along the Missouri River bank, some farmers contend.
“These floods — the big floods like in 2011 and 2010, and I suspect this one — we may have had flooding, but the magnitude of these floods would not be like they are today,” Missouri farmer Roger Ideker told The Kansas City Star Sunday. “We would not be setting record highs.”
The Army Corps of Engineers says the government could have done little if anything to lessen the severity of flooding that has hit several states in the Midwest and caused President Donald Trump to issue a national disaster declaration over Iowa.
SEE ALSO: Alarmists Link Historic Midwest Floods To Global Warming. Science Says…Nope
“Last week there was a huge storm that covered the middle part of the country and dropped a lot of rainfall,” Army Corps emergency management specialist Mike Dulin told The Kansas City Star Thursday.
Local officials are concerned the Corps’ management of the Missouri River has caused increasing amounts of sediment to fill in the river’s bottom, cutting its capacity to move water.
Over decades, the region has grown more prone to floods as Missouri’s waters increasingly flow over the river’s banks, Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley told reporters Friday.
“The river just can’t hold as much water as it once did. So when you get to flood conditions like this, you get this overflow, and we need to figure out how much of what the Corps has been doing – how much their management – has contributed to crises like this one,” the Republican said.
“You see the different way the Corps has been managing the river in recent years, I think I need to ask – it’s my job to ask – is there a connection here?” Hawley continued. “If there is, we need to get to the bottom of it and do something about it. The Corps may need to revise their plans, they may need to revise their flood controls plans, they may need to revise their habitat plans.”
A group of farmers, led by Ideker, are suing the Army Corps of Engineers over past mishaps along the Missouri River. A federal judge ruled in 2018 in the farmers’ favor, finding the agency prioritized endangered animals over the farmers’ property and livelihoods.
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