CNN.com - Transcripts Return to Transcripts main page CNN NEWSROOM High School Pregnancy Pact; Assessing Flood Damage; Candidates' Economic Plans Aired June 21, 2008 - 16:00 ET THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED. FREDRICKA WHITFIELD, CNN ANCHOR: Next in the NEWSROOM. Flood damage in the Midwest. At least $3 billion worth. Families do what they can to keep the might Mississippi at bay. We'll take you there live. And a group of teenage girls reportedly making a pact to get pregnant. What were they thinking? Plus this (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Of course, I suspected it all along, but I had no proof. (END VIDEO CLIP) WHITFIELD: An Olympic athlete who says she is unfairly linked to the steroid scandal, now her chance for a comeback. Well, depending on where you live along the Mississippi River, the worst of the flooding is over. It is happening right now. Still to come or perhaps you thought it was over, but it's not. Here's what we know. The worst is definitely over in Iowa, but the damage will be around a long, long time. The agriculture secretary estimates that crop losses there could hit $3 billion. A dozen more Iowa counties have been declared federal disaster areas. That brings the total to 69. Only 30 Iowa counties escaped serious flooding. In Missouri and parts of Illinois, Mississippi River levels dropped when levee failures upstream diverted some of the water. Well, now they're headed up again. It won't crest for a day or two. Some places expect high watermarks near the record set in 1993. Well, water is still rising in Old Monroe, Missouri, northwest of St. Louis. At last check, CNN's Reynolds Wolf was up to his hips in water. So, Reynolds, where is it now? Are you in the same place? REYNOLDS WOLF, CNN METEOROLOGIST: We've moved a little bit. I just want to show you a few things. Right behind you got the CNN live truck and if you happen too look down this way, well you're looking down toward the tracks to Winfield. That's the way to Winfield. Now this way, this happens to be the way to Old Monroe. And then if you follow me this way, well this is the way home. The way home for a lot of people, hundreds of homes right down this road, which now covered completely in water. The waters in many places continue to rise, but the good news is the forecast, as you mentioned, not quite as extreme as we originally anticipated. In fact, a few feet lower. But still a major flood, a major flood that's affecting millions of people up and down this river. You know, the Mississippi River happens to be the largest river on the continent. When you have a major flood,