Sunday, March 28, 2010
The Big Flood
The flood of 2009 had everyone on their toes. Cities all over North Dakota were in panic mode because of the rising water in spring. The water flooded much of the land causing thousands of dollars in damage. People had to get evacuated from their homes. I don't know one person that would want to get evacuated from their homes every year because of the spring flood. It wasn't a good deal especially the Fargo/Moorhead area. Millions of sand bags had to be made for Fargo, Valley City, and other towns. Luckily we have many nice people that volunteered their time to make those sand bags. Grand Forks didn't have to do much sandbagging. After the 1997 flood that nearly flooded the whole town, they built huge dikes along the river on both sides to prevent flooding. So far it as worked. Grand Forks had learned a lesson from the past. I just hope and I bet many more people hope Fargo and other towns can do the same thing "learn from the past." They let water out all winter long on Ashtabula dam. That made so the lake could hold more water and slow the running water down to let the river height go down as well. So far Fargo is trying to make up a diversion plan. They talked about making a diversion channel that goes around Fargo or goes on the other side around Moorhead. They also talked about is to make dams and tributaries on the Red River. The other thing they are talking about is making huge dikes on both sides of the river like Grand Forks. There's pros and cons according to some people in the area. With making huge dikes according to the article, he says it will make the river downstream higher and cause way worse flooding than it already does. If they decide to put in dams and tributaries that will flood the farmer's crop land. The farmers are not going to be happy with this idea. With making a diversion channel according to the article it will cost $783 million dollars of local funding. The people of North Dakota and Minnesota are going to have to pay for that out of their own pockets. I'm sure some taxes and other funding will go up for the whole state. The only ones that should have to pay are the people that live next to the Red River. It is their choice to liver there or not. These plans are raising many different arguments and sides. It doesn't matter what plan they do use people are going to hate it and people are going to love it. The people are mostly pushing towards the diversion channel. They say it protects the greatest amount of people, provides the greatest number of benefits, and takes the most land out of the flood plane.
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I agree with preparing early. Every one is sitting around here and saying it is a good possibility that it will flood, but no one is doing anything. After what Valley city went through last year you would think that they would be concerned about preparing. I guess maybe they are taking chances and holding off on recruiting people and sandbagging until the warning worsens.
ReplyDeleteI think it is good that everyone took precautions for this spring - its all around smart. Its also great that they're thinking up diversions and whatnot to prevent this from being an annual occurrence, because everyone wants to avoid going through that disaster as much as possible, no matter what it takes. The best thing is that people do remain on their toes and be prepared, and thank the weather thats been behaving well lately.
ReplyDeletePreparing early is definitely something they could improve on from last year. The rush to get things done and fixed caused a lot of problems and so I hope that they keep that in mind this year when preparing to contain the flood.
ReplyDeleteI'm so glad everyone was prepared in case there was a big flood but fortunatly there was hardly any flooding at all. I think North Dakota just needs a break from the terriablness nature has been putting us through these past couple years.
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