Flooding Across Kentucky Leaves at Least Eight Dead
By Taylor Six, Monica Kast and Beth Musgrave
Source Lexington Herald-Leader
At least eight people died this weekend as heavy rainfall and widespread, severe flooding swept across the state, according to Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear.
All of Kentucky’s 120 counties reported flooding, said Chris Bailey, chief meteorologist for WKYT. Counties reported between 3 and 8 inches of rainfall beginning Friday night.
One man was found dead in floodwaters Saturday evening in Clay County. The county coroner identified him as 73-year-old Donald Keith Nicholson. Officials said he drove into water covering KY 80 in the Horse Creek community, near Manchester.
In Hart County, a 7-year-old girl and her 35-year old mother died Saturday night after being swept away by floodwaters, said Hart County Coroner Anthony Roberts. The girl’s body was recovered Saturday night, but rescue missions were paused due to rising flood waters, Roberts said. Her mother’s body was recovered Sunday afternoon.
Officials said their vehicle was submerged at Campground Road, near Priceville Road, at the bridge along Bacon Creek. Their identities have not been released.
On Sunday afternoon, Roberts said he was not aware of any other missing people or fatalities reported in Hart County.
In all, three people died in Hart County; two died in Pike County; and one died in each of Washington, Clay and Nelson counties.
Most of the deaths were related to floodwaters. The death in Nelson County was weather-related and due to winter weather. Beshear said he expects the number to rise.
Rainfall began statewide Friday evening and continued throughout all day Saturday. More than 300 roads were closed in Kentucky on Sunday morning, and the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet described the impact as “historic.”
“Kentucky, we are seeing dangerous and life-threatening conditions across the state, and things are only going to get tougher due to widespread flooding and incoming weather,” Beshear posted on social media.
More than 1,000 rescues had been made as of 12:30 p.m. Sunday. Beshear said the state is in the search and rescue phase.
President Donald Trump approved federal aid after Beshear declared an emergency for the state Sunday, freeing federal funding for impacted areas.
Beshear thanked President Trump and said it was the fastest he had seen a president sign off on an emergency declaration. The Federal Emergency Management Agency is already on the ground.
The National Weather Service Louisville reported the state received 3 to 8 inches of rainfall on top of previous heavy rainfall in recent days.
Rain hammered much of the state, but many of the most affected areas were in Eastern Kentucky — a region that was also devastated by flooding in summer 2022, which killed 45 people.
Days of thunderstorms rolled through Eastern Kentucky during that flooding, dumping between 14 and 16 inches of rain on the region, according to the National Weather Service. The heaviest rain came late July 27 and into July 28.The rain caused rivers and creeks to rise to historic levels, and former President Joe Biden approved a disaster declaration in Kentucky.
“Right now, we’re not necessarily seeing that level of event all across Kentucky, but we may in some regions,” Beshear said Sunday.
Beshear said initial evaluations of damage showed widespread, but less intense damage, than the 2022 flooding.
“The difference between the 2022 flooding and this is this hit the whole state,” Beshear said. “We have flooding in Western Kentucky, we have flooding in Eastern Kentucky. So when we ultimately look at the overall damage caused, it might be more comparable in the end than we think.“
The destructive flooding caused significant damage to Kentucky Power, according to company officials. More than 18,000 customers were without power Sunday morning. Blocked roads from high water, mudslides and downed trees have been reported throughout the southern part of Kentucky Power’s territory, according to the company.
Access to many of the areas is not possible due to flooding and blocked roadways. Pike County has nearly 6,000 customers without power, and Knott County has about 2,200 customers. Breathitt, Floyd, Leslie, Letcher, Martin and Perry counties also have significant outages.
More than 39,000 people statewide were without power, Beshear said.
“More announcements as water subsides and cleanup begins, but this is far worse in town than it was in 2022. Please pray for Hazard tonight,” the city posted on X, formerly known as Twitter.
Hazard, in Perry County, was one of the hardest-hit cities in 2022, and officials said Saturday night the current situation was worse.
“This is much, much more widespread than 2022,” Bailey said. “The flood was more severe (in 2022) but only impacted a handful of counties in the southeast.”
Lee County government buildings hit by flooding
Lee and Floyd Counties were also heavily affected by the rainfall. In Lee County, officials shared a photo of a flooded county courthouse. The Lee County Coroner’s office was filled with several feet of water, and alarms could be heard going off in the building on Sunday afternoon.
Downtown Beattyville businesses were evacuated around 1 p.m. Sunday after water levels continued to rise and covered many streets, said Blake Slone, director of emergency management for Lee County.
Water was on Main Street and many of the surrounding streets, prompting the order to evacuate. Officials do not have a count of how many businesses or homes had been flooded.
“Not all of them have water in them but some of them do,” Slone said of Main Street businesses.
In addition, the Lee County Courthouse basement also flooded on Sunday.
Slone said there were no deaths and no swift-water rescues in Lee County.
In adjoining Estill County, 10 state and county roads were closed due to high water from the still-rising Kentucky River, said Ronnie Riddell, director of emergency management for Estill County.
Riddell said that number could climb as the Kentucky River continues to rise. It is expected to crest sometime Monday morning.
No businesses or homes have reported flooding, Riddell said.
One hundred and forty-two people are being housed at state parks with availability at Pine Mountain, Cumberland Falls and Natural Bridge. Jenny Wiley State Park in Floyd County is full, Beshear said.
The Kentucky Community and Technical College System campus in Breathitt County is also being used as a shelter facility, according to Ryan Quarles, the system’s president.
“We are trying to reiterate to everyone to pay attention to the weather forecast, it has and will change,” Riddell said.
Upcoming weather forecast
Flood watches in Eastern Kentucky were canceled Sunday morning, and shortly thereafter, a winter weather advisory went into effect with up to 2 inches of snow expected in parts of the state.
“If a road isn’t flooded, it could have some slick spots from the snow,” the weather service said.
Going into the week, Kentuckians can expect a bitterly cold week with another snowstorm Tuesday night through Thursday with several inches of snow will fall across the state then.
Temperatures will be near zero degrees, according to Bailey.
“This will make for a delayed recovery and a lot of hardship,” he said.
______
©2025 Lexington Herald-Leader. Visit kentucky.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.