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Whitesburg newspaper reporters cover historic floods while living through the disaster

A copy of The Mountain Eagle.
A copy of The Mountain Eagle.

The Mountain Eagle in Whitesburg, Ky., has covered Letcher County and the surrounding area for more than a century. When historic flooding hit about two weeks ago, the paper’s small staff and roster of contributors did what they’ve always done: tell the stories of the region and the people who live there. 

Sometimes that’s difficult to do, said publisher and editor Ben Gish. 

“Exhausting and emotional,” Gish said about living through the experience while reporting the news. “And I feel so bad for people who have lost everything. Everywhere you look… it’s unbelievable.”

Cathy Hicks, who helps out on days the paper comes out, said it’s all been surreal. She remembers going to Walmart a few days after the floods, and people were crying. 

“Everybody that was walking around there was shell-shocked,” Hicks said. “They were telling their stories and stuff, and by the time that I got out of there, I was torn up. It was awful.”

The Mountain Eagle’s flood coverage has included stories on FEMA applications, safe cleanup efforts, where to get supplies, community members leading the way on recovery, how people outside the region can help, and why floods are getting worse

Gish and his team of contributors have really dug into the role strip mining has played in flooding. One headline read, “An unnatural disaster.”

“There’s no place for the water to go but into people’s houses,” Gish said. “And all those huge corporations that came up here, made millions of dollars, they’re gone now. We’re left with what they left us with, which is no jobs and ruined topography and just a breeding ground for disasters like this.”

Listen to the full interview with Gish:


89.3 WFPL News Louisville · Whitesburg newspaper reporters cover historic flood while living through the disaster

Gish took over the paper’s operations from his late parents, who had devoted their journalism careers to covering Kentucky. They bought the paper shortly before severe floods devastated the area in 1957.

“Which before this was considered the worst,” Gish said. “But this is 10 times that.”

The Mountain Eagle has been offering its weekly print issue for free since the floods. 

Gish said he’ll do that as long as he can. 

“I can’t go broke doing it. But I feel like we need to get the information out to people.”