BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — With rivers still rising after days of storms that dumped more than a foot of rain on the Southeast, authorities searched Monday for two missing people along Alabama waterways as a Mississippi community cleaned up from a killer tornado.
Crews looked along the Cahaba River near Birmingham for a woman who disappeared Sunday. A spokesman with Cahaba Valley Fire and Rescue said her vehicle was found near the waterway.
In northeast Alabama, emergency workers used a helicopter and drones to look for a teenage boy still missing days after the vehicle he was riding in was swept off a bridge by floodwaters from a creek at Bucks Pocket State Park, authorities said. Two other teens escaped the vehicle.
Residents used boats to reach flooded-out neighborhoods and schools were shut down even though the sun was out in most of the Tennessee Valley.
The weather service reported flooding at nearly 80 locations mostly in Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi and Tennessee.
Dozens of roads were closed because of flooding, and conditions will worsen to the south as water drains toward the Gulf of Mexico.
A woman was killed when a tornado hit Columbus, Mississippi, and a man died when he drove into floodwaters in Tennessee, officials said.
Columbus Mayor Robert Smith Sr. said Ashley Glynell Pounds, 41, of Tupelo and her husband were renovating a house Saturday evening, and when the husband went to get them something to eat, the building collapsed in the storm, killing her.
Smith said 12 other people were injured, but the injuries did not appear to be major. City spokesman Joe Dillon said the tornado also seriously damaged a school and two community center buildings.
“There was pretty extensive damage,” Dillon said Sunday, a day after the Columbus twister struck. “But the streets today have been filled with workers and volunteers, all working hard to clean up the mess.”
In Knox County, Tennessee, officials said a man died after his vehicle became submerged in high water.
The National Weather Service said many areas got around 10 inches (25 centimeters) of rain last week, and some spots received more than 12 inches (30 centimeters).
In Alabama, the riverside city of Decatur said water levels already have exceeded 100-year levels and could rise another 2 feet (0.6 meters). Schools are closed in at least a half-dozen systems in the region.
Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey declared a state of emergency allowing the state to assist with disaster response.
Elsewhere around the South, homes, highways, parks and bridges were flooded or put out of commission amid the heavy rains and severe storms.
News outlets report that water rescues were performed over the weekend in some Middle Tennessee counties. Interstate 40 near the Tennessee line with North Carolina was closed by a rockslide, one of the dozens of roads and highways shut down throughout the region, transportation officials said.