Kids, teens key to flood effort


Associated Press

FARGO, N.D.

Some children lugged sandbags that weighed more than they did. Determined teens showed up just after dawn with groups of friends, ready and willing to shovel. New groups of kids arrived by the busloads, all ready to join the race to protect their city from the rising Red River.

Thousands of volunteers offered a hand this week to fill and stack sandbags to place along the river and near endangered homes as Fargo faces the threat of a severe flood after the river’s expected crest Sunday. But the heart of that volunteer corps is the city’s youngest citizens.

It’s a job that elsewhere might be reserved for emergency workers or at least, their parents. But here, students can be excused from class with their parents’ permission and join the hundreds of adults, local workers and others who took on the task of filling 1 million sandbags to hold back the impending floodwaters. The group met that goal Wednesday, three days ahead of schedule.

“They pretty much have saved our community,” said David Stark, 62, who worked beside hundreds of student volunteers this week. One of the few seniors to join the effort, he had to take a break after hurting his hand and was in awe of the students’ dedication.

Many of the volunteers know what they’re doing may help save a neighbor or friend. Michael Russell, 14, didn’t mind missing a day of school to get dirty filling sandbags. He guessed many would end up near his own home or his friends’ homes.

“I think I’m helping the city and my friends,” he said.

Jaclynn Powers, 18, a student at Fargo North High School, said Wednesday that she was sore from her second-straight day of filling bags but didn’t want to miss the action.

“I went to school for a couple hours yesterday, and there was like four kids in each class,” Powers said. “I feel it’s more important right now to help out the community.”

The students are providing critical manpower when their community needs it most. Since March 1, volunteers have been bused in to Fargo’s “Sandbag Central,” an arena-size utility building normally used to house a fleet of 25 garbage trucks, said Terry Ludlum, the city’s solid-waste utility manager. There, with the help of machines and volunteers, up to 100,000 sandbags can be filled in a 12-hour shift. Fifty volunteers can fill about 1,000 sandbags an hour.

More than 1,000 children and teens have participated in the effort.

“We certainly would not be this far along without the help of these kids,” Ludlum said.

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