When Melissa Rice went to bed Sunday night, she knew there was a chance for inclement weather and prayed there would not be a tornado.
There was no tornado in Baldwin, Wis., but hours of heavy rain — up to 9 inches according to some estimates — brought flooding that washed out roads and sent gallons of water pouring into basements all across town.
The torrent had law enforcement conducting water rescues and evacuations in Baldwin, a town about 40 miles east of St. Paul. At least eight families were evacuated from houses near a creek and taken to a nearby community center, said Jeff Klatt, field service captain with the St. Croix County Sheriff's Office.
A man died after he lost control while driving on a water-covered road. Gary Parent, 70, of Emerald, Wis., crashed on County Road E near Hwy. 63 about 5:15 a.m. He was pulled from his submerged van and taken to a hospital where he later died, Klatt said.
At least five other motorists standing on the roofs of their cars were rescued from rushing water on Hwy. 63 in the Baldwin area, Klatt said.
The storms, which rumbled through the southern Twin Cities metro area before striking western Wisconsin, also flooded roads. In Lakeville, police said southbound Cedar Avenue south of Dodd Road was flooded. Water swamped the intersection of 167th Street and Gladiola Avenue and Gerdine Path. A fallen tree blocked 184th Street at Kenyon Avenue.
But the eastern side of St. Croix County was particularly hard hit. The Sheriff's Office said numerous roads and bridges were washed out and many roads were impassable.
"We urge everyone to use extreme caution if you have to travel," the Sheriff's Office said. "Be very cautious of submerged roadways in low-lying areas and blind corners."