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Missouri River Flooding 2011: South Dakota Residents Told Evacuation Could Last 2 Months (VIDEO)

Missouri River Flooding 2011 South Dakota

AP/The Huffington Post   First Posted: 05/31/11 02:00 PM ET Updated: 07/31/11 06:12 AM ET

PIERRE, S.D. (AP) — Crews raced approaching floodwaters Tuesday to complete emergency levees aimed at protecting South Dakota's capital city and two other towns as the swollen Missouri River rolled downstream from the Northern Plains. Meanwhile, the mayor of Minot, N.D., ordered a quarter of the city's residents to evacuate areas along the flooding Souris River.

Residents of the upscale community of Dakota Dunes in southeastern South Dakota, below the final dam on the river, have been told to move their possessions to higher ground and be ready to leave their homes by Thursday, a day before releases from the dams are set to increase again.

Several thousand people in Pierre, the state capital, and neighboring Fort Pierre on the west bank have been working day and night since late last week to lay sandbags around their homes and move to safety.

Those forced to leave their homes may not be able to return for two months or more. No evacuation orders had been issued Tuesday in South Dakota, but many people in the three cities had already moved to safer places.


"We're going to fight this flood with every fiber of our beings, and we'll do everything we can to minimize its effects," Gov. Dennis Daugaard said.

In Minot, N.D., Mayor Curt Zimbelman said the evacuation order affects about 10,000 residents who live along a 4-mile stretch of the Souris, which has risen with rain, snowmelt and discharges from Lake Darling. Zimbelman said residents are expected be out of their homes by Wednesday night, in part to give construction crews room to raise and reinforce earthen dikes in the area. The Souris is part of a different river system than the Missouri.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is increasing releases from the six dams on the Missouri River to drain water from record rains of up to 8 inches that fell in eastern Montana and Wyoming and western North Dakota and South Dakota in the past two weeks. Heavy runoff from melting snow in the northern Rocky Mountains is expected to add to the problem soon.

Flooding in Montana has damaged at least 200 homes on the Crow Indian Reservation and many more homes and businesses in other areas. Water levels had dropped more than 2 feet in the central Montana town of Roundup, but warmer weather later in the week is expected to cause a new round of flooding in parts of the state as mountain snows melt.

In North Dakota, more than seven miles of levees were being built in Bismarck and another 3 1/2 miles were going up across the river in Mandan.

A minimum-security state prison on the Missouri's east bank just south of Bismarck was evacuated, North Dakota corrections officials said Tuesday. About 140 inmates from the Missouri River Correctional Center were moved Monday to a juvenile detention center in Mandan, but officials said they will be housed away from the center's teenagers.

Officials in western Iowa, downstream from Dakota Dunes, were making plans to deal with flooding in Sioux City and other areas. The Nebraska towns of Niobrara and Santee are already dealing with flooding from the Lewis and Clark Reservoir, while cities further downstream are preparing for high water over the next month.

In the three South Dakota cities, streets were busy with National Guard trucks, pickups carrying sandbags and large trucks carrying clay to build the levees. Many homes had already been surrounded with walls of sandbags that were up to 6-foot high.

Daugaard said the earthen levees were being built to 2 feet above the expected crest in all three towns, but he urged residents not to count on the levees to protect them.

"Citizens should assume the worst, that we will be unsuccessful in getting the levees raised in time or that the levees once raised will not hold," the governor said.

He said no deaths had been reported from flooding, and for now, the concern is about saving property.

"In the end, we must remember these things are just things," Daugaard said.

Water levels are expected to rise by 8 feet in the Dakota Dunes area by June 14, when releases from Gavins Point Dam are expected to peak at 150,000 cubic feet a second, about double the current flow, Paul Boyd of the Corps of Engineers said.

Daugaard said nearly all of Dakota Dunes, a city of about 2,500, would be subject to flooding if the levee system does not hold.

Jeff Dooley, city manager, said Dakota Dunes planned to shut down its water treatment plant and connect to Sioux City, Iowa's water system.

Russ Riesen said he and his wife had already moved most of their possessions to an apartment they rented in nearby Sioux City.

"We're going to sit it out up in the hills and hope everything works out," Riesen said. "With Mother Nature, you never know what's going to come."

Dakota Dunes, an upscale planned community established in 1990 in the extreme southeastern tip of South Dakota, is home to a number of companies. It was founded after computer maker Gateway started operations in the area, but the company later moved to California.

Water levels are predicted to rise about 4 feet in Pierre and Fort Pierre, where about 2,000 people in Pierre and several hundred more in Fort Pierre could be affected. Water has already reached some houses in Fort Pierre, and levees are expected to be completed before Friday morning, when releases are next increased from Oahe Dam.

Daugaard said a small residential area in Yankton, upstream from Dakota Dunes, was expected to flood, but little flood damage was expected on the Lower Brule and Crow Creek Indian reservations in central South Dakota.

___

Associated Press writers James MacPherson and Dale Wetzel in Bismarck, N.D., Josh Funk in Omaha, Neb., and Grant Schulte in Niobrara, Neb., contributed to this report.

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PIERRE, S.D. (AP) — Crews raced approaching floodwaters Tuesday to complete emergency levees aimed at protecting South Dakota's capital city and two other towns as the swollen Missouri River rolled ...
PIERRE, S.D. (AP) — Crews raced approaching floodwaters Tuesday to complete emergency levees aimed at protecting South Dakota's capital city and two other towns as the swollen Missouri River rolled ...
 
 
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06:39 AM on 07/30/2011
Very good broadcast reporting by Jennifer Meckles. She should strive to move ahead in the broadcasting world. Whoever wrote her script and description of the Souris River did a very good job and hopefully the people of Minot were able to move themselves, family and belongings to higher dryer ground. I feel for them.
06:27 PM on 06/07/2011
With the Missouri River flooding in central and eastern South
Dakota making Page 1 news, Black Hills & Badlands tourist businesses have another
headline announcement: There are no Missouri River flooding concerns in western South
Dakota. Area businesses want to stress to visitors to not put travel plans on hold. The Black
Hills & Badlands of South Dakota and eastern Wyoming are a perfect vacation destination.
For travel information, visit www.blackhillsbadlands.com.
11:27 PM on 06/05/2011
I have no idea how heartless you guys can be. I am PROUD to be from SD. Living in SD is like having a huge family. Everyone might not know each other but it does not matter because they will help your no matter what. I went to Pierre to help sandbag and you can't even describe the feeling. Those talking about credit card rates does it really matter? What did these people who could lose everything have to do with that? Then people talking about how we don't care about hurricanes? My church sent food, water, and money to the people that it affected. Also to Haiti. We do our best with what we have out here because we are not the most important people, but we TRY and don't tell people they deserve what is happening to them.
06:43 PM on 06/05/2011
My heart goes out to all the people impacted by this flood. I wish we had an underground system that would pump the extra water to the drought areas. Solve two problems
06:51 PM on 06/03/2011
I have not read every post so I do not know if this has been addressed yet, but this was not a natural disaster but a MAN made disaster. Everyone who lives near Lake Oahe knows that the reservoir has been full for two years. The Corps of Engineers knew that the snow in Montana had not melted yet. They created this flood and the people are paying for it.
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5isrms9uJNLdS2mBzYm5WulYEZ42g?docId=728c311a06e14e36b4d1efce9c035c74
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SelenicMagick
Old, grouchy, toothless, sub-human bridge-dweller
02:28 PM on 06/04/2011
The reality is that when we build Levees to "control flooding" we may not have as many floods but the ones we have are invariably much worse than they would be had man not decided to play God.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
johnb123
All I ask..just be reasonable....do things my way
02:17 PM on 06/01/2011
I like how some are saying others have no compassion for S.D. Did S.D. have any compassion on the rest of us when they allowed the credit card companies to scam everyone else with high interest rates?
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03:17 PM on 06/01/2011
Your treatment of all the people in a state as a monolithic entity that thinks, votes, and believes as one is as simple-minded as it is misleading.
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dumpdemliars2
One goal...One and done!
04:43 PM on 06/01/2011
Told you before Skippy..............Your paying high interest rates it's your fault NOT the credit card co. Anybody stupid enough to get ripped off by high interest credit cards deserves exactly what they get.
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johnb123
All I ask..just be reasonable....do things my way
05:52 PM on 06/01/2011
Hey dude, I pay around 11% interest rates....your state still protects scammers and money changers.
01:17 PM on 06/01/2011
this is all bad, and i hope things work well for everyone, or as best it can turn out. i also remember all those nasty folks who hammered on the gulf coast and florida and said why are you even there...why am i subsidizing insurance for hurricane areas...well i guess the tide has turned as it always does....although i will be donating to help in the relief effort for you flood vicitims and i won't be saying those kind of nasty things that does no one any good. hope you remember this next time a hurricane hits and take the high road as you should, as i am.
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Boodrow Malone
12:57 PM on 06/01/2011
Red State Flood? Sorry, no soup for you.
01:20 PM on 06/01/2011
a little harsh. disasters should trump politics even on comment sections. let's unite and remember our commonality, we are all expsoed to nature and disasters sooner or later and should unite to help one another whether through tax money to bring relief or charity or just good old fashioned support. we are americans after all.
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01:25 PM on 06/01/2011
Charming.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
oldngrumpy
My micro-bio is no longer empty
12:56 PM on 06/01/2011
There seem to be some strong opinions about the wealthy community of Dakota Dunes getting so much attention and aid as the homes there are threatened. A little history of the area is required to give this some perspective.

Dakota Dunes is located in South Dakota, directly on the point where it meets Nebraska and Iowa. The major metro area is Sioux City, Ia, which is a city of about 120,000. Most of the residents of "The Dunes" are transplants from this city who make extensive use of the infrastructure there, but pay their taxes to South Dakota. Many doctors and other professionals have located there to take advantage of South Dakota's lack of income tax, but draw upon the adjacent communities for their customer base.

This tax discrepancy between the communities has been a source of contention in the area, as many in Sioux City and the Nebraska community of South Sioux City feel that the wealthy are being allowed to dodge their responsibility to the community. The Dunes was designed as an enclave for the wealthy and includes all the expected amenities, including an Arnold Palmer designed golf course and country club, for which the residents pay very healthy mandatory fees. It was, however, built upon sand dunes in a flood plain against the advice of the Corps.
01:22 PM on 06/01/2011
good info, thanks for sharing. although and this isn't so much meanto for you rather others...this flood isn't allah's/gods/cosmic revenge on these folks so let's not treat it as such, fair enough?
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johnb123
All I ask..just be reasonable....do things my way
04:53 PM on 06/01/2011
"..built upon sand dunes in a flood plain against the advice of the Corps"....than let them sink or they can cover the cost themselves.
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prettyfnliberal
and not a single frack was given that day.
12:29 PM on 06/01/2011
anyone with half a brain understands that the liberals in this article are being sarcastic, and mimicing the reactions that cons have toward anyone needing help. it's obvious that dems are the only party willing to help the citizens of this country, despite their, party affiliation, religious beleifs, race, class.
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KarlaElisa
The atmosphere is Toxic
11:29 AM on 06/01/2011
suppose these are our first climate change refugees.
Al Schrader
Don't limit your potential
12:19 PM on 06/01/2011
In Wyoming they said is was a gas leak.
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Boobuzuela
Satire identical to actual Republican positions
11:25 AM on 06/01/2011
Isn't this where "Peggy," from Capitol One lives?
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Sneedsnood
Writer, composer, author of off-Broadway musicals
11:11 AM on 06/01/2011
At first it was ironic that all these "red' states are being hit by natural disasters. Now it's downright scarey. I guess the Lord is not mocked after all.
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NVEd
I love mountains.
11:03 AM on 06/01/2011
While I may abhor the voting record of some states which experience natural disasters they are still Americans and deserve our help and compassion. We in Western Nevada have experienced flooding and it was a mess to clean up after. We are also the third most earthquake prone state in the U.S., I would hope that were we to have a major earthquake we would receive help from our government and fellow Americans.
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babyjesussaysso
On the internets nobody knows you're a dog.
11:33 AM on 06/01/2011
If the so called "compassionate conservatives" have any say you will be hoping in vain, after all there are still rich people and mega corps that need the money more.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
11:49 AM on 06/01/2011
Thank you

fanned and faved
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smp276dp
free us from the craziness
11:03 AM on 06/01/2011
It seems no one is safe from the warth of mother nature these days. From one end of the country to the other.