CAP
helps fight floods on Red River
Maxwell, Air Force Base, Ala. -- Citizen volunteers
from Civil Air Patrol’s North Dakota and Minnesota
wings are stepping forward to serve as flooding from
the Red River threatens communities in both states.
CAP
members are filling and stacking hundreds of
thousands of sandbags near the civic center in
Fargo, N.D., as well as outside a radio station in
the city. CAP aircrews also are making damage
assessment flights, as weather permits, to help
protect critical infrastructure.
North Dakota and
Minnesota have been hit with multiple weather
emergencies in recent days as flooding persists
along the Red River and its tributaries. A severe
blizzard blew through most of the region earlier
this week, blanketing the ground with thick heavy
snow. Power lines are down in western North Dakota
and a massive ice jam has blocked the Missouri River
south of Bismarck, N.D., causing the evacuation of
residents. Ice jams have caused several other
smaller evacuations.
Much of the Fargo,
N.D.-Moorhead, Minn., metropolitan area has become
an island with the closing of most roads in and out
of area communities due to flooding and snowdrifts.
Over the past three
days, more than 150 Civil Air Patrol members from
the North Dakota and Minnesota wings have
participated in sandbagging operations as well as
limited damage assessment flights for local
emergency managers.
Operations began on
Monday with teams from both wings sandbagging at
various locations in the Fargo area, such as the
Fargo Dome, where members assisted with filling
thousands of sandbags an hour.
CAP members also
assisted radio station KFGO in Fargo. Four teams of
members assisted local residents with sandbagging
operations that helped protect this critical
emergency communications point for the community.
The station is still up and broadcasting.
“It
is inspiring to see the volunteer spirit and sense
of mission in the midst of this emergency,” said
Col. Karl Altenburg, commander of the North Dakota
Wing. “All personnel, especially the cadets,
continue to impress the community with their
willingness and ability to serve.”
The mission base
remained open throughout Tuesday evening with North
Dakota Wing Lt. Col. Michael Provencher serving as
incident commander and Maj. Donald Dalton from
Minnesota Wing’s Red Wing Squadron serving as ground
branch director.
Despite the snow and
wind, 75 Civil Air Patrol volunteers arrived at 8
a.m. Wednesday morning and were rapidly dispatched
to sites around the area. Many members helped build
dikes by stacking sandbags along the Red River south
of Fargo.
Although sore from
lifting and moving heavy sandbags, enthusiasm for
the mission was very high among the CAP volunteers.
The Red Cross brought food and water and offered
additional support as needed.
Air operations
branch director, North Dakota Wing Col. Walt
Vollmers, plans to launch flight crews from Fargo
and Grand Forks as soon as weather permits. The air
crews will be tasked with taking damage assessment
photography of communities along the Red River and
the rising lakes in northeast North Dakota.
CAP members are also
assisting with disaster relief operations near
Crookston, Minn.
"I am very proud of
the members of Civil Air Patrol who are coming from
all parts of both states to help in this time of
need,” said Minnesota Wing Commander Col. Thomas
Theis.
Civil Air Patrol is
maintaining a Web site that notes communication to
members and digital images of its efforts at
http://www.ncrpao.org/specials/2009_floods/index.htm
Civil Air Patrol,
the official auxiliary of the U.S. Air Force, is a
nonprofit organization with 55,600 members
nationwide. CAP performs 90 percent of continental
U.S. inland search and rescue missions as tasked by
the Air Force Rescue Coordination Center and was
credited by the AFRCC with saving 91 lives in fiscal
year 2008. Its volunteers also perform homeland
security, disaster relief and counterdrug missions
at the request of federal, state and local agencies.
The members play a leading role in aerospace
education and serve as mentors to nearly 22,000
young people currently participating in CAP cadet
programs. CAP has been performing missions for
America for 67 years. Visit
www.gocivilairpatrol.com
for more information.
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Photos: (Please credit North Dakota Wing for these
photos except as indicated in the tagline.)

Farmstead-1.jpg - Photo of a farmstead near Ameria,
ND taken by a Civil Air Patrol Damage Assessment
Flight.

Georgetown_bridge-1 - The Georgetown, ND bridge
taken by a Civil Air Patrol Damage Assessment
Flight.

heisel.jpg
- C/Airman Matt Heisel of Minnesota Wing taking a
break after hours of filling sandbags in Fargo, ND
Moorhead.jpg - C/SSgt Jarek Connolley of Minnesota
Wing placing sandbags in Moorhead, MN. Photo by Capt
Richard Geis, MN Wing
Moorhead2.jpg - Members of the Civil Air Patrol join
local citizens in sandbagging efforts in Moorhead,
MN.
Radiostation1. jpg - Civil Air Patrol members
assist area residents in sandbagging operations at
Radio Station KFGO in Fargo, ND. Photo by C/TSgt
Simone Ramler of MN Wing