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Minot, North Dakota Flooding Shatters 130-Year-Old Record; Souris River Still Rising

Minot North Dakota Flooding 2011

DAVE KOLPACK   06/24/11 09:23 PM ET   AP

BISMARCK, N.D. — The Souris River's full weight hit Minot on Friday, swamping an estimated 2,500 homes as it soared nearly 4 feet in less than a day and overwhelmed the city's levees. City officials said they expected as many as 4,500 homes to be severely damaged by the time the river peaks Saturday.

More than a quarter of the city's 40,000 residents evacuated earlier this week, packing any belongings they hoped to save into cars, trucks and trailers.

"The river's coming up rapidly," Mayor Curt Zimbelman said. "It's dangerous and we need to stay away."

Fed by heavy rains upstream and dam releases that have accelerated in recent days, the Souris surged past a 130-year-old record Friday and kept going. The river was more than 5 feet above major flood stage Friday afternoon and expected to crest as early as Saturday evening some 8 1/2 feet beyond major flood stage.

The predicted crest was lowered a foot based on new modeling by the National Weather Service, but it was little consolation in Minot.

"This has been a very trying time for our community," Zimbelman said. "It's emotionally draining for all of us."

As they had the past two days, emergency officials focused on protecting water and sewer systems to avoid the need for more evacuations. They were confident about the water system, but a little less so about the sewer treatment plant. It had been sandbagged as high as possible.

Zimbelman said water coming up through a storm sewer briefly began to erode one downtown levee before it was controlled.

Also of concern was the Broadway Bridge, a key north-south route. Levees protecting the northern approach were being raised, but Army Corps of Engineers Lt. Col. Kendall Bergmann said it was touch and go. The levee work also protected the campus of nearby Minot State University.

Members of the state's congressional delegation pressed for a federal emergency declaration making people eligible for individual assistance, a step they said was needed for the Federal Emergency Management Agency to set up transitional housing centers.

Sen. John Hoeven said a helicopter flight over the Souris valley showed damage to smaller cities nearby. He estimated more than 5,000 homes in the valley would eventually have water damage, including those in Minot and Burlington, where officials gave up sandbagging Thursday. The Army Corps of Engineers was leading an effort to build emergency levees in Velva, a small town about 20 miles downstream of Minot, before the Souris crests there Tuesday.

In Burlington, deputy auditor Cindy Bader estimated Friday that more than half of the town's 1,000 residents had left to escape the rising Souris River.

Burlington's city hall, school and police and fire departments appeared safe, but some homes in the evacuation zone had water up to their first floors and higher. In one neighborhood, the tops of two traffic signs barely peeked above the brown, brackish water, which reached just beneath the eaves of two nearby houses.

Wayne Walter, a Burlington city councilman and truck driver for a snack food company, said residents were stunned by the river's rapid rise.

"When we went to bed last night, and when we got up this morning, it was a big difference," Walter said Friday. "Down by the dikes, we saw it just trickling over (Thursday night). This morning, everything was gone."

Walter said he lived across the street from the evacuation area, and the Souris was still about 4 feet from his own home.

"Right now, we're staying there, but we've got the camper packed," he said. "They tell us to leave, we're gone."

The National Guard had 870 members activated for the crisis. Minot is best known as home to an Air Force base, which oversees 150 Minutemann III missiles in underground launch silos scattered over 8,500 square miles in northwest North Dakota.

Col. S.L. Davis, commander of the 91st Missile Wing, said there was some "localized flooding" at a handful of missiles sites because of the wet spring and summer. But he said the silos are designed to safety handle some water and protective measures were taken at a few sites similar to what's done in preparation for spring runoff from snowmelt.

In Minot, a car parked near the Broadway Bridge was dry Friday morning but submerged by midday. Nearby, about a half-dozen gophers found themselves stranded in a small and shrinking dry patch. Furniture store workers cheered as one of the gophers swam 20 yards to safety.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service launched four boats to patrol flooded neighborhoods and respond to 911 calls, but no injuries were reported and no rescues were necessary. The evacuation zone was empty except for emergency officials and some geese, who paddled in about 5 feet of water washing down the streets.

George Moe, 63, whose house was about a block from the water's edge, returned briefly Friday to pick up some keys. Moe said the only thing left in his house was the mounted head of an antelope shot by his wife, who died about three years ago.

Moe worried about the home he's lived in for four decades and the shop where he works as a mechanic; it was taking on water and he wasn't sure he'd have a job after the flood.

"I hate to see something go to hell after 40 years," he said. "There ain't much you can do."

___

Associated Press writers Dale Wetzel in Burlington and John Flesher in Minot contributed to this report.

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BISMARCK, N.D. — The Souris River's full weight hit Minot on Friday, swamping an estimated 2,500 homes as it soared nearly 4 feet in less than a day and overwhelmed the city's levees. City offic...
BISMARCK, N.D. — The Souris River's full weight hit Minot on Friday, swamping an estimated 2,500 homes as it soared nearly 4 feet in less than a day and overwhelmed the city's levees. City offic...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jkanon
A pragmatic progressive
09:12 PM on 06/26/2011
I feel that I am posting messages of sympathy constantly nowadays what with record floods, massive tornadoes, etc. Our climate is changing, and we starting to reap more and more problems. I wish the pople of Minot the best and pray that, in time, they will recover.
08:02 AM on 06/26/2011
You know you're dealing with a different kind of community when 12,000 people in Minot (not counting thousands in smaller towns) are displaced. But the emergency shelters have more than 500 people in them. They're not going to hotels, because hotels been at capacity for 2 years due to the oil boom. That means everyone else is staying with family, friends, neighbors, and strangers. Only in North Dakota.
08:09 AM on 06/26/2011
I meant "shelters have NO more than 500 people in them."
10:18 PM on 06/25/2011
I am 67 and a cynic and everything that I have been hearing and looking at about the floods screams of cover up. I started my inquiry in the US about the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers, the reports were all coming out of Montana, North Dakota & Minnesota. I thought to myself "how can it all happen on the US northern border. Why isn't Alberta & Saskatchewan involved with the floods also? The Mississippi is supposed to originate in Canada." So I checked, which was not easy, and found out that yes the two provinces are being effected as are others. Then I looked at the Northwest Territories that are above the provinces and they are also flooding. Lately, the NWT’s have lost a good deal of ice cover. And we all know that the northern polar ice cap is not doing too well. So, this 500 year flood plan is not just happening in the US. I'm sure if I took this further I would find that the northern polar cap is no longer there and we all know that water flows down hill. I think I'll check in on Russia, Finland, Norway, Sweden, Scotland, the Shetland Islands, Ireland and Iceland. I am not going to be surprised with what I find.
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05:08 PM on 06/25/2011
For all those who say these uninsured people should have bought flood insurance -

First, if you have a mortgage and live in a flood zone, you MUST carry flood insurance. Conversely, if you live in a flood zone but don’t have a mortgage, flood insurance is optional and you assume the risk if you choose to forego the insurance.

Current flooding that breaks a 130-year-old record will redraw and redefine the federal flood maps.

Some folks who are getting flooded had no flood insurance because their property was NOT in a federal flood “zone”. If you do not live in a federal flood zone, you cannot buy flood insurance, no matter how much you want it, at any price.

Today’s newly flooded areas will create brand new flood zones on updated federal maps.
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02:51 PM on 06/25/2011
Wow, someone down thread said they believed that all our recent natural disasters are happening because God took his protective “veil” off the US, due to our “declining” morality.

For real, SERIOUSLY?

If this is true, where was God’s protective “veil” when the likes of these great natural disasters struck - when we were supposedly a more “moral” people?

1811 New Madrid earthquake (partially reversed Mississippi River)
1888 New York blizzard (400 deaths)
1896 Eastern North America heat wave (1500 deaths)
1906 San Francisco earthquake/fire (3000+ deaths)
1925 Tri-State tornado (695 deaths)
1927 Great Mississippi Flood (246 deaths)
1928 Florida Okeechobee hurricane/flood (2500 deaths)
1930's Dust Bowl drought (500,000 homeless; deaths from dust pneumonia and malnutrition)
1936 North American heat wave (5000+ deaths)
1964 Alaskan earthquake/tsunami (131 deaths)
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03:55 PM on 06/25/2011
For some unexplained reason, the “moral” always die along with the “immoral” in these disasters.

If God is supposedly punishing the unrighteous with natural disasters, as some believe, why does His hammer also fall on the righteous?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jeremyewilliams
Reality is not the GOPs cup of tea!
05:02 PM on 06/25/2011
Unbenounced to this person, their 'God' is as real as Peter Pan.
02:36 PM on 06/25/2011
Actually, this is happening because New York legalized gay marriage and God, being kind of old, mixed up New York and North Dakota.
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AGooglyMinotaur
Ahh, Theseus. It appears you are out of thread.
05:05 PM on 06/25/2011
Fanned and faved!!!
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Moxo
Our enemies are in the GOP.
02:36 PM on 06/25/2011
But isn't "American Exceptionalism" all about shattering old records?
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banana republican
Next in line for crumbs from the King's Table
01:49 PM on 06/25/2011
This is very clearly caused by climate change. So was the flat tire I had last week.
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Moxo
Our enemies are in the GOP.
02:37 PM on 06/25/2011
Was it a record flat tire?
09:19 PM on 06/25/2011
It couldn't be a record flat tire. It was flat only on one side !!!
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Moxo
Our enemies are in the GOP.
02:57 PM on 06/25/2011
Record flat tire?
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Dredd
Our government is a wartocracy.
12:34 PM on 06/25/2011
You are confused. The nuclear power plant is on the Missouri River very close to the Omaha metroplex.

There are no plants I no of close to Minot, which is not a nuclear story, it is a global weirding story, as is the nuclear power plant vulnerability to floods.
02:26 PM on 06/25/2011
There are no nuclear plants in ND. ND is a coal-fired power exporter. Hence, global warming does not exist...at least it is not caused by ghg emissions. Just ask any of our federal delegation.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jayyhawker
11:29 AM on 06/25/2011
I hope is dose not make it to whare I live
11:25 AM on 06/25/2011
Sad to hear about it
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mm3rdeye
11:11 AM on 06/25/2011
The Native American never had these type of problems with floods. Paleface do not live in accordance with nature.
06:19 PM on 06/25/2011
nor illuminati
11:03 AM on 06/25/2011
The Dakotas flooding, isn't that an annual event? Why don't we take some of the money squandered in Iraq and Afghanistan and spend it on levees and dams in the Dakotas?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lbsaltzman
Permaculture and Sustainability
11:39 AM on 06/25/2011
Better to spend the money on fighting global warming which is the root cause. And rather than dams and levees, people should live farther from the flood plains of rivers. Dams and levees cause more problems than they alleviate. Levees just push the problems downstream.
12:31 PM on 06/27/2011
Flooding caused because the down stream ice doesn't melt in the spring as fast as it did decades ago, therefore causing the flooding. Yep - the slower melting of the ice is caused by global warming.
10:50 AM on 06/25/2011
I don't care how they vote. I don't care where they live. My heart goes out to them.
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10:43 AM on 06/25/2011
"Members of the state's congressional delegation pressed for a federal emergency declaration making people eligible for individual assistance, a step they said was needed for the Federal Emergency Management Agency to set up transitional housing centers."

For those detractors and nay-sayers out there, those "rugged individualists", bootstrappers and Ayn Randers - this is just one example of American "socialism".

It's a crucial socio-economic concept that those who care deeply about their fellow man believe in wholeheartedly.

No lone man/family can fight a raging river - why is he/they expected to fight even worse, man-made adversities totally alone, with little to no resources?

People, we are in this TOGETHER.

My prayers and best wishes are with the people of Minot. :)