River nears crest in west Arkansas, but more rainfall looms

Flood waters surround homes in Fort Smith, Ark. Wednesday, May 29, 2019 as water from the Arkansas River continue to rise. (AP Photo/Hannah Grabenstein)

In this Tuesday, May 28, 2019 photo, Victor Delgado, left, and Adrian Jimenez move furniture out of Delgado’s house ahead of rising floodwaters, in Dardanelle, Ark. Thunderstorms are expected to bring unwanted rain to areas along the Arkansas River, which is predicted to crest Wednesday well above record levels in western Arkansas (Staton Breidenthal/The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette via AP)

In this Tuesday, May 28, 2019 photo, people watch the water flow on the Arkansas River near the Highway 7 bridge in Dardanelle, Ark. Thunderstorms are expected to bring unwanted rain to areas along the Arkansas River, which is predicted to crest Wednesday well above record levels in western Arkansas. (Staton Breidenthal/The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette via AP)

This Tuesday, May 28, 2019 aerial photo shows a flooded highway Arkansas River in Sand Spring, Okla. Communities that have seen little rain are getting hit by historic flooding along the Arkansas River thanks to downpours upstream that have prompted officials to open dams to protect some cities but inundate others with swells of water. (DroneBase via AP)

Father and son Brad and Bart Hindley, take a boat to Brad’s flooded house in Fort Smith, Ark., Wednesday, May 29, 2019. Brad said he doesn’t live in a flood plain, but flood waters from the Arkansas River continue to rise. (Hannah Grabenstein/AP) (Hannah Grabenstein/AP)

Flood waters surround homes in Fort Smith, Ark., Wednesday, May 29, 2019. Flood waters from the Arkansas River continue to rise. (AP Photo/Hannah Grabenstein)

FORT SMITH, Ark. — Heavy rainfall intensified flooding in already saturated areas along the Oklahoma-Arkansas border on Wednesday as the swollen Arkansas River hit record levels in Arkansas’ second-largest city.

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