The 11 levees that failed last week during catastrophic flooding along the Missouri River were maintained by local associations or private owners, with just one inspected by the Army Corps of Engineers this year, KCUR and APM Reports has found.
As losses mount in Nebraska, Kansas, Iowa and Missouri, the flooding has refocused criticism on the Corps鈥 long-term management of the river. The Corps provides oversight for smaller levees, called "non-federal," run mostly by agricultural and other landowner groups.
Seven of the 11 levees were found to be 鈥渕inimally acceptable鈥 in the early 2010s and there are no records showing inspections for three others, according to an analysis of information from the , which is operated by the Corps and the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
The first levee breaches, which flooded the corner where Missouri, Iowa, Nebraska and Kansas meet, were on March 15. The muddy Missouri River now covers the entire area, forcing towns to evacuate, closing Interstate 29 from Nebraska nearly to St. Joseph, Missouri, and shutting down spring planting for the area's farmers.
"I've never seen anything like it in my lifetime," said Richard Oswald, a farmer whose home where he was born in 1938 near Langdon, Missouri, is now under water.
Seen from above, church spires peak out from the water where small towns used to be. Center-pivot irrgiation systems, once towering 14 feet over farmland, look like still snakes in the water. Steel grain bins, full from last year's record harvest, slump over, yellow corn spilling into the water.
Levee responsibility
The Corps does two types of inspections on federal and non-federal levees, . Routine inspections are 鈥渢ypically conducted each year鈥 on levees under its safety program, the site says. Periodic inspections are done every five years, led by a professional engineer. There are three inspection ratings, the site says: acceptable, minimally acceptable and unacceptable.
The seven Corps' inspections of last week's breached or overtopped levees date back to 2010 and 2012, according to the National Levee Database. Two of the levees don鈥檛 fall under the Corps鈥 authority during disaster responses.
Much of the decision-making for the smaller levees is left up to the district directors. But , an emeritus professor of hydrogeology at Washington University in St. Louis, blames the Corps for the flooding. The agency has reshaped a historically shallow, multi-channel, wide river into a slim channel that runs too high and floods too easily, 鈥渓ike a piece of spaghetti on a plate,鈥 he said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 narrow and featureless,鈥 Criss said. 鈥淭hat is not what Lewis and Clark saw.鈥
The Corps of Engineers didn鈥檛 respond to requests for comment.
Tom Waters, chair of the , does not not believe the Corps was lax on inspections, noting that districts do their own inspections. He pointed instead to the "bomb cyclone" that hit the central U.S. mid-month.
鈥淭hese levees are well-designed, they鈥檙e well-engineered and they perform as designed,鈥 Waters said. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 put a gallon of water in a quart jar.鈥
The system of district associations are organized much like a school district, Waters said, so people living in the district are taxed to pay for the building and upkeep on the levees.
Among the levees that failed last week was one built by the federal government 鈥 in 1953 in Doniphan County, Kansas. The others were built by the local districts or private landowners, he said.
If anything is to blame, Waters said, it鈥檚 the failure to improve the U.S. flood control infrastructure. When the levees fail, districts are required to repair to the pre-flood condition, some of which date back to the 1950s, he said.
鈥淎t the same time, we鈥檙e seeing higher river levels and more water coming faster, so higher volume and higher velocity in the river system, and we haven鈥檛 done anything with the flood control infrastructure to compensate for that,鈥 Waters said.

Criss, the professor at Washington University, said the flooding is a man-made problem and any suggestion that it鈥檚 due to climate change is wrong. While Criss believes that global warming may be part of the problem, the flooding was brought on by a river sculpted by the Corps, combined with the levee breaks, which create high velocity waters, he said.
Natural flooding is gentle, about a foot a day, he said, not torrents of water ripping up everything in sight.
鈥淎 levee break is catastrophic,鈥 Criss said. 鈥淵ou smash the silos, you knock houses off their foundation. A levee break is like a dam break.鈥
Among those criticizing the Corps for mismanaging the flooding systems is Missouri Gov. Mike Parson. In declaring a , Parson said he鈥檚 concerned and wants to 鈥渉ave a good conversation鈥 about the agency鈥檚 role.
鈥淚 think there鈥檚 a long history with the state not really being happy with the Corps of Engineers, how they conduct this thing, how they鈥檙e doing these levees, and how they鈥檙e actually using the waterways in our state,鈥 Parson said.
Ground zero
A , in a case that began in Kansas City and ended up in Washington, D.C., found that the changes the Corps made in 2004 increased the likelihood of flooding and landowners should get $300 million for the 鈥渢aking鈥 of their land by flood. The suit was brought by 372 landowners in six states and was led by a St. Joseph, Missouri, attorney.
The area currently flooded is ground zero, Boulware said, because it鈥檚 the site of the worst flooding, in 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, and 2019. The court found that the Corps had changed its priority from protecting landowners against flooding and instead decided to construct more habitat for fish and wildlife.
鈥淔lood control was a top priority for six decades,鈥 Boulware said. 鈥淚n 2004, they changed that and they changed that to benefit two birds and a fish.鈥
Boulware and Waters said the next step to help protect landowners along the river will take an act of Congress, who must take a fresh look at the Corps鈥 priorities.
鈥淚 feel Congress has a lot of the blame to shoulder,鈥 Waters said.
Missouri and Kansas haven't yet added up losses. In Nebraska, the storm caused and .
Oswald, the Missouri farmer, said he doesn't expect that he'll be able to plant crops this year and he lost 20,000 bushels of corn stored from last year's harvest. He thought he lost his home during the 2011 flood, but he went back four months later after the waters receded. In 2011, Oswald said, they had enough warning to prepare to evacuate, but this time he just had a few days warning.

"That's the only home I've ever known," Oswald said. "It's very hard to realize I, nor anyone, will ever live there again."
The 11 levees
Here are the levees that were breached or overtopped as of March 22, according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. This information was compiled from reports in the , which is maintained by the Corps and FEMA.
Union Township: Two segments of this levee near Big Lake in Holt County, Missouri, were among the first to break down, on March 15. The area's mostly farmland, but has a daytime population of 153. It was locally constructed and maintained by the Union Township Levee District (Union Township segment) and Holt County Levee District No. 10 (Holt County No. 10 segment).
Although the levee database said that the 鈥渓ikelihood of a flood overtopping this levee in the next year has been estimated at 20 percent, or one chance in five,鈥 a flood was inevitable.
鈥淭his equals a 100 percent likelihood of water overtopping the levee over the life of a typical 30-year mortgage,鈥 the report said. 鈥淭he risk assessment identified some concerns including; pipe inspections and emergency preparedness.鈥
Holt 10: This levee in Holt County, Missouri, was breached on March 15. The two sections of roughly nine miles found in this levee district had very little information and no inspections on record. It鈥檚 maintained by Holt County Levee District No. 10.
Holt 15: This levee that doesn鈥檛 fall under that allows the U.S. Corps of Engineers to use disaster response authority. It was breached on March 16.
Corning: This levee doesn鈥檛 fall under that allows the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to use disaster response authority. It was breached on March 16.
Holt 9: This levee system, which was breached on March 17, is 13.5 miles long and snakes through Holt County, Missouri, farmland. It鈥檚 operated and maintained by the Holt County Levee District.
Although this levee was breached during the record flooding of 1993, the last assessment, in 2016, found that the likelihood of a breach was estimated at 2 percent, or one chance in 50.
鈥淭he risk assessment identified some concerns with pipe inspections, sod cover, seepage, emergency preparedness, and the likelihood of the levee to breach when overtopped,鈥 the report said.
Canon: This levee near Forest City in Holt County, Missouri, was breached on March 20. Built In 1950 and nearly two miles long, there is no record of an inspection or risk screening. It鈥檚 operated by the Canon Drainage District of Holt County.
Grape Bollin Schwartz: This 4.7-mile levee of farmland in Atchison and Leavenworth counties in Kansas was breached on March 20. There is no record of an inspection and it鈥檚 operated by the Grape-Bollin-Schwartz Levee Association.
The risk assessment 鈥渋dentified some performance concerns with pipe inspections and emergency preparedness,鈥 but rated it at a 5 percent, or one-in-20, chance of being overtopped. Extrapolated out, the report said, 鈥渆quals a 76 percent likelihood of water overtopping the levee over the life of a typical 30-year mortgage.鈥
Bean Lake: This levee system, which runs seven miles in Platte County, Missouri, was breached on March 20, as well as during the flood of 1993. It鈥檚 operated by two agencies, the Platte City Drainage District (Platte County Section 2 segment) and the Bean Lake Levee Association (Bean Lake segment). It was inspected in June 2012.
The Corps鈥 2016 risk assessment said that the 鈥渓ikelihood of a flood overtopping this levee in the next year has been estimated at 2 percent, (one chance in 50).鈥 Extrapolated out, that equaled a 45 percent 鈥渓ikelihood of water overtopping the levee over the life of a typical 30-year mortgage.鈥
鈥淭he risk assessment identified some performance concerns with seepage, sod cover, and emergency preparedness planning,鈥 the report said.
Rushville Sugar Lake: This is a 10.2-mile levee running across Buchanan and Platte counties in Missouri and operated by the Rushville Sugar Lake Levee District. It was last inspected in June 2012.
The likelihood of a flood overtopping this levee was estimated at 5 percent, or a one-in-20 chance, the assessment said. That equaled a 79 percent 鈥渓ikelihood of water overtopping the levee over the life of a typical 30-year mortgage.鈥
鈥淭he risk assessment identified some concerns with slope stability, seepage, pipe inspections, and emergency preparedness,鈥 the report said.
MRLS 500R: Doniphan County, Kansas, breached March 21.
The system covers 1,494 acres of Missouri River floodplain near White Cloud, Kansas, and is mostly farmland. It was built by Corp of Engineers in 1953 and handed over to the Iowa Point Drainage District No. 4. It was last inspected in March 2018, and a report says that the 鈥渓ikelihood of a flood overtopping this levee in the next year has been estimated at 0.5 percent, or one chance in 200.鈥
Henry Pohl: The only levee inspected this year, on Jan. 28, it runs nearly four miles in Atchison County, Kansas. It鈥檚 maintained by the Atchison County, Kansas, Conservation District.
The risk assessment said that the 鈥渓ikelihood of a flood overtopping this levee in the next year has been estimated at 5 percent,鈥 or a one-in-20 chance.
鈥淭he risk assessment identified some concerns with pipe inspections, emergency preparedness, pressurized pipes running over the levee, and seepage,鈥 the report said.
APM Reports Angela Caputo contributed to this report.
Peggy Lowe is an investigative reporter based at KCUR, which is part of an investigative reporting collaboration with APM Reports. She鈥檚 on Twitter .
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