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Western Kentucky Declares Emergencies as Flash Floods Overwhelm Hopkinsville
National Desk
May 3, 2026
First responders in Christian County rescued people from 12 homes over the weekend as flash floods inundated neighborhoods and downtown Hopkinsville, forcing drivers to navigate around water-covered main roads. Forty animals sheltering at a pet lodge in Hopkinsville were also rescued during the emergency operations. The flooding severity prompted Christian and Graves counties to each declare states of emergency on Friday, while Ballard County had already declared its own emergency Wednesday following an EF-2 tornado that injured four people.
Gov. Beshear declared a state of emergency for the entire Commonwealth on Wednesday in advance of the multi-day severe weather outbreak that began April 2. The declaration proved prescient when President Donald Trump approved an emergency declaration for Kentucky on Friday, unlocking federal assistance to supplement state and local storm response efforts across impacted areas.
The National Weather Service office in Paducah issued dire warnings Friday, forecasting a "dangerous and historic rainfall event" that would continue into Saturday night with potential for "catastrophic flash flooding" across the region. Kentucky Emergency Management Director Eric Gibson mobilized search and rescue teams from Virginia, Maryland, Alabama, and Vermont to be positioned statewide this weekend to bolster local first responders overwhelmed by the scope of the emergency.
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