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Locals Help in Flood Zone
Mankato Free Press
Story 26 March 2009
Link to Original Story
By Brian Ojanpa
Free Press Staff Writer
Jon Macemon and seven fellow members of the Mankato Squadron
of the Minnesota Wing Civil Air Patrol arrived in Fargo
about noon Thursday.
“We hit the ground running and we haven’t stopped since,”
Macemon said late Thursday afternoon after helping to
sandbag a levee.
The 20-year-old Macemon, a student at South Central College
in North Mankato, said the levee reinforcement effort was
successful, just beating the rising flow of water.
Meantime, Fargo-area weather continues to dish out a
beating.
“It’s really cold and really windy, but people are hopeful.
They’re working really hard to save their homes.”
Macemon said the squadron’s lodging place that night was
uncertain.
“We’ll be in a church or a gymnasium. All we want is a roof
and hot shower and we’re happy.”
Civil Air Patrol members from Minnesota and North Dakota
have been engaged in disaster-relief operations all week.
Civil Air Patrol is the official auxiliary of the U.S. Air
Force.
The Fargo ordeal’s challenges have begun to take a serious
mental toll on residents and first responders, said Mankato
Red Cross volunteer mental health worker Walter Roberts, who
arrived in Fargo Wednesday.
“It’s a matter of physical and emotional fatigue, and it’s
clearly beginning to set in. Mother Nature is not being kind
right now, and she’s not backing off,” said Roberts, a
Minnesota State University professor of counselor education.
Roberts and his volunteer colleagues are working with people
in shelters and supporting emergency responders who have
been working around the clock for days.
“We’ve made several visits to flooded areas outside Fargo. A
lot of small communities are really fighting,” Roberts said.
“It’s truly an epic struggle to hold back tributaries trying
to get into the Red River. It’s almost surreal — dense
snowpack, miles and miles of water, and ice.”
Roberts said the oft-changing predictions of what the crest
will be and when it will occur are causing particular
stress.
“There was a tremendous amount of hope and energy starting
out, but it’s cold and demoralizing and the realities are
setting in.”
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