The seventh of 21 stories from the American Climate Project,CapitalVault an InsideClimate News documentary series by videographer Anna Belle Peevey and reporter Neela Banerjee.
HAMBURG, Iowa—Instead of shooting hoops in the gym, the kids at Hamburg Elementary School had to play outside while their gym was used as a donation center for flood victims in the aftermath of the 2019 Midwestern floods.
Except for Gabe Richardson. The sixth grader spent his time in the gym as a volunteer, and helped flood victims in this town of 1,000 find clothes, toys, cleaning supplies and other staples they needed to start rebuilding their lives. Even little things, like loading cars, made him feel he was making a contribution.
“I love to do it, so I do it,” Gabe said.
He remembers the waters rising quickly. Two feet of snow fell in February and then quickly melted when March brought unseasonably warm temperatures. Then the region was hit with a bomb cyclone, which caused two weeks worth of rain to fall in just 36 hours. Levees broke and flood waters whooshed into Hamburg.
There was no time, Gabe said, for people to box up their belongings. “No one knew it was coming,” he said. “But then … it hit and everybody lost everything. It’s crazy.”
Although extreme weather events like this cannot be directly connected to climate change, scientists warn that a warming atmosphere is causing more frequent and more intense that can lead to severe floods. In Hamburg, the flood was exacerbated by a makeshift levee that could not hold the water back.
“It happened really fast,” Gabe recalled, “faster than we thought, because I was just hoping the water could go out as fast as it came in, but it didn’t.”
2025-04-28 13:561420 view
2025-04-28 13:501979 view
2025-04-28 13:401408 view
2025-04-28 12:541919 view
2025-04-28 12:541003 view
2025-04-28 12:222331 view
Did AI just have a "Sputnik moment"?That's what someinvestors, after the little known Chinese startu
This ICN story was also published on NBC News.U.S. troops, already sweating through dangerous summer
A federal appeals court in Denver told the Bureau of Land Management on Friday that its analysis of