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Harvest Public Media is a reporting collaboration focused on issues of food, fuel and field. Based at KCUR in Kansas City, Harvest covers these agriculture-related topics through an expanding network of reporters and partner stations throughout the Midwest.Most Harvest Public Media stories begin with radio- regular reports are aired on member stations in the Midwest. But Harvest also explores issues through online analyses, television documentaries and features, podcasts, photography, video, blogs and social networking. They are committed to the highest journalistic standards. Click here to read their ethics standards.Harvest Public Media was launched in 2010 with the support of a grant from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Today, the collaboration is supported by CPB, the partner stations, and contributions from underwriters and individuals.Tri States Public Radio is an associate partner of Harvest Public Media. You can play an important role in helping Harvest Public Media and Tri States Public Radio improve our coverage of food, field and fuel issues by joining the Harvest Network.

When Rivers Can't be Controlled, Farmers are Left in Limbo

Marissanne Lewis-Thompson for Harvest Public Media
Winter flooding in Alexander County, Illinois, left farmland covered in water, sand and debris, including this river buoy.

Driving along rough and muddy gravel roads next to what was once a rich soybean field, farmer Adam Thomas gazes out on an upended mess of tubes, wheels, and hoses from a nearby farmer's irrigation system.

Nowadays, his farmland in Miller City, Illinois, looks like a scene from “Lawrence of Arabia.” Layer upon layer of sand as much as 4-feet deep covered nearly 100 acres. Large sand deposits, fallen trees and fragments of a damaged road wreaked havoc on his once fertile farm ground.

The damage is the result of a massive winter flood, which left thousands of acres of Missouri and Illinois farmland damaged.

In January, excessive rainfall in the Mississippi River caused a rare winter flood. Floodwaters shattered records, plunging nearly 43,000 acres of land underwater and causing a mile-long hole in the Len Small levee, according to the Natural Resource Conservation Service.

Credit Marissanne Lewis-Thompson for Harvest Public Media
Illinois farmer Adam Thomas worries his land will be flooded again, after a winter flood left a hole in a local levee.

After nearly three months, the levee still has a gaping hole and farmers like Thomas are left in limbo.

“As long as there's a hole in that levee, it can put the sand right back where it was,” Thomas said. “There's no point in fixing the roads. There's no point in digging the ditches. There's no point in cleaning anything up, because if you do all that come April it could just put it all right back on it.”

Fields today essentially open right onto the river, which could bring water, sand and silt right back onto farm fields this summer. With normal flood season approaching and a chunk of the levee gone Alexander County Engineer Jeff Denny said time’s running out.

“There's just not enough time and enough working conditions, working days to be able to get in and make some sort of repair or do something,” Denny said.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers said it is placing rocks along the Mississippi River’s bank to prevent it from cutting another channel. As for the levee, there aren’t current plans to fix it.

Illinois’ Alexander County farmers are part of a familiar debate about farmland in the floodplain, and who’s responsible for its protection.

Rivers are unpredictable and despite efforts to manage them, they can’t always be contained. That can leave farmers, business owners and residents of the floodplain in the midst of a confusing situation.

Credit Marissanne Lewis-Thompson for Harvest Public Media
After a Mississippi River flood, deep sand drifts cover what were once crop fields.

“The Midwestern floodplain soil is some of the richest in the world exactly because it has flooded periodically for a millennia,” said Christine Klein, a law professor at the University of Florida.

When farmers plant in the fertile floodplain they’re left at the mercy of both the river and the engineers that try to control it. Throughout the 20th Century, Klein says, huge levee systems, government disaster relief programs and subsidized federal flood insurance were generally created with good intent, but have created untenable futures.

“The net result of those three things is that people are lured into harm’s way,” Klein said. “They say, ‘Well there’s a levee there. They, somebody – someone who’s hopefully omniscient is telling us it’s safe to be here.’”

Now, farmers in Alexander County are left to play a game of Russian Roulette. To plant or not to plant? Farmer Adam Thomas is planning to delay planting his crop, thanks to the potential for flooding through the busted levee.

“The farmers can't fix it back,” Thomas said. “If the farmers could fix it back, we'd be fixing it back right now. But we just can't do it alone this time. And we need some help.”