April 8, 2009 10:32 AM

Weary N.D. Residents Brace For New Floods

(AP)  Marc Shannon says he trusts the two-week-old sandbag dike behind his south Fargo house, but that didn't stop him from asking a passing survey crew for some help as he prepared for a second crest of the swollen Red River.

"Can you do me a huge favor?" Shannon asked one crew as they walked neighborhoods Tuesday using lasers to check dike levels. "Can you shoot my step there so I know what my main floor is?"

Shannon wanted to know how high waters would have to creep to flood the first floor of his house. After surviving a record-setting crest at the end of March, he and other weary Fargo residents were hoping their sandbags can handle another round.

There was some relief Tuesday after the newest crest prediction came in lower than preliminary estimates. The Red River crested at 40.82 feet on March 28. The National Weather Service now projects a second crest between 38 and 40 feet in mid-April - a measure of good news after forecasters had given a 75 percent chance just last week that the river could hit 41 feet or more.

"At 38 feet, boy, we're standing tall and maybe we can start to put this town back together again," Mayor Dennis Walaker said.

Engineers are confident that the sandbag dikes feverishly constructed in neighborhoods late last month can handle another round, with a little more work from weary residents. The dikes were built to 43 feet and remain there, and they protected Fargo and neighboring Moorhead, Minn. - a metro area of about 128,000 people - from widespread damage.

But they want residents to check both themselves and their sandbags for signs of fatigue.

"We're going to have to do the best we can to re-energize the community and get those levees where they need to be," said April Walker, a city engineer.

The city is also again asking for volunteers to help make sandbags Wednesday morning at the Fargodome parking lot, in hopes of bumping up their stores from 200,000 to 500,000. Those will be used primarily to shore up dikes and fill leaks, officials said.

This spring's lingering Red River flooding comes from a combination of record precipitation in the fall, an early freeze, heavy snows and saturated soils. A slow melt and the lack of precipitation in the last week are good signs, the weather service said.

In the meantime, neighborhoods are quiet except for occasional National Guard trucks ferrying sandbags. Brady Oberg, a private surveyor hired by the city, said he hasn't seen many residents on his daily rounds.

"Everybody seems to be at work now," Oberg said. "It will probably look a little different in a couple of days."

National Guard workers dropped off several pallets of sandbags in Shannon's driveway on Monday night. Guard trucks drove through a hole in a backup levee that puts Shannon's house on the wrong side of the dike. Visitors must park two blocks away and climb a temporary wooden staircase over the mud wall.

"It's a heck of a mess and it doesn't make you feel very good," Shannon said of the backup levee. "But you have to have it, because somebody along here could have made a bad dike. It just takes one spot."

Some, like Maj. Gen. Dave Sprynczynatyk of the North Dakota National Guard, are worried that the age of the sandbags will require more constant monitoring the second time around.

Walker, the city engineer, said most of the sandbags have been protected with plastic sheeting and appear to be holding up.

"A few weeks is not, in my mind, a big deal for a sandbag," Walker said.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by tomadams99 April 9, 2009 7:58 AM EDT
Quite a different reaction to disaster by the people of Fargo, ND than in other parts of the nation. One must admire the way they pull up their boot straps and keep on going.
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by Renegade.Rivers April 9, 2009 6:47 AM EDT
Actually if anyone could see this as punishment, it must be realized that many of the areas where large floods have occurred are where some of the worst atrocities against the Indians were committed by the white man. How can some one expect to steal something, and lie about it, and then make treaties that were broken again and again, and not expect to suffer great hardships. Eight different distinct tribes were displaced in North Dakota alone, between 1851 and 1900. Many were killed with the biological weapon of the day, small pox, by way of blankets infected with the disease.

How can any great land expect to live long and be prosperous, when there is not peace and harmony within the land between all life forces that live there? The Great Spirit that guides us all, punishes those that betray his trust, and guide those who follow his path. Unfortunately, most Americans today have no real comprehension of what has taken place and what atrocities have been committed on this land we call America. They know little of when the soil was covered, and the rivers ran red with the blood of the native Americans who loved and cherished this land we now call America.

The native Americans were driven off their land in North Dakota so that the land could be turned into farm land, where farmers have made millions feeding the white man, while the native Americans who loved and cherished the land have lived in squander, and hungry; and died of disease, starvation, and a broken heart.

Now we have great compassion for the white mens plight there, while the plight of the Native Americans was never heard. What the Great Spirit does, he will, but the punishment that is deserved is more than most can comprehend.

This is the true history of the great land we call America.
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by lyndar2 April 8, 2009 8:46 PM EDT
Some of you obviously need to get a life! These are hard working people who are fighting to save their homes and businesses and need a pat on the back and a dry spot. God is not punishing anyone but he should be angry on people who blame him for Mother Nature.
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by Honorplease April 8, 2009 5:51 PM EDT
God gave these people a chance for redemption but apparantly they did not take advantage of that. Instead they sin and God will send more floods.
Posted by mrs_neves

20 bucks says your husband,or significant other,is an Alcoholic.
Maybe you live with a chimp?
Reply to this comment
by Henri_Rochard April 8, 2009 11:45 AM EDT
Actually, this is punishment from God for the men in the North Dakota legislature trying to take away a woman's 'right to choose'.

Abortion may be a sin, but it's a woman's choice, not the government's.

'Render, therefore, to Caesar the things that are Caesar's and to God the things that are God's.'

The North Dakota legislature is trying to play God.
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