Widespread River Flooding Swamps the Midwest From Milwaukee to St. Louis With Flood Warnings Across Multiple States
MIDWEST, UNITED STATES — As tornado and severe thunderstorm headlines have dominated the past several days, a dangerous and widespread flooding crisis has been quietly building across the Midwest, with Flood Warnings, Flood Watches, and Flood Advisories now blanketing a massive corridor stretching from the Upper Great Lakes through the Illinois River Valley and into Missouri.
Flood Alerts Stretch From Green Bay to Springfield Missouri
Active flood alerts cover an enormous multi-state footprint across the Midwest. Flood Warnings — the most serious tier of flood alert — are concentrated along river corridors near Green Bay, Bay City, Milwaukee, La Crosse, Chicago, Davenport, Springfield Illinois, and St. Louis. These warnings indicate flooding is already occurring or is imminent along rivers and low-lying areas in these zones.
Flood Watches are also in effect across portions of the region, indicating conditions remain favorable for additional flooding to develop over the next several days as rivers continue rising from the recent heavy rainfall associated with the multi-day severe weather outbreak.
Milwaukee Hit Hard as Cars Submerged in Floodwaters
Milwaukee, Wisconsin is among the hardest-hit cities, with video from the area showing vehicles submerged in deep, fast-moving floodwaters on city streets. The imagery underscores the severity of the flooding event unfolding across the Great Lakes region as rivers and drainage systems overwhelm their capacity following days of heavy rain.
| Alert Type | Key Cities Affected |
|---|---|
| Flood Warning | Green Bay, Bay City, Milwaukee, Chicago, Davenport, Springfield IL, St. Louis |
| Flood Watch | La Crosse, portions of Wisconsin and Illinois |
| Flood Advisory | Detroit corridor, Fort Wayne area |
River Flooding Expected to Persist for the Next Several Days
Flood alerts are listed as valid for the next few days, meaning river levels across the affected corridor are not expected to crest and recede quickly. Areas along the Illinois River, Mississippi River tributaries, and Great Lakes drainage systems face an extended period of elevated and dangerous water levels before conditions begin to improve.
Residents near rivers and low-lying areas from Wisconsin and Michigan through Illinois and Missouri should avoid all flood-prone areas, never attempt to drive through flooded roadways, and monitor alerts closely as river crests are reached over the coming days.
Stay with CabarrusWeekly.com for live river flooding and flood alert updates across the Midwest through the week.
