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Nielson said the evacuation was "strongly recommended" to avoid wear and tear on the city and to clear the way for emergency and construction work. The National Guard had a Blackhawk helicopter and some high-wheeled vehicles ready in case troops are asked to assist with evacuations, Capt. Dan Murphy said. Murphy said the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers was closely monitoring Baldhill Dam, upstream from Valley City on the Sheyenne, trying to calculate how much water the dam can hold back in its reservoir and how much can be released without adding too much to the river. The river rose Monday above the 20-foot Valley City record set in April 1882. It reached 20.6 feet Tuesday but fell to 20.33 feet by noon Wednesday, the National Weather Service said. The flood risk to Valley City could last a month, said Greg Wiche, director of the U.S. Geological Survey's Water Science Center in Bismarck. Fran Aune and her stepdaughter, Deb Wacha, were moving Aune's belongings out of her duplex Wednesday. Aune and her husband, Andrew, planned to set up a camper on a higher part of Valley City and wait out the floodwaters. "It's scary," she said. "We've been praying a lot."
The Sheyenne empties into the Red River, which is expected to reach a second flood crest of its own near Fargo this week. The Red crested at Fargo and neighboring Moorhead, Minn., late last month just short of 41 feet, after volunteers filled thousands of sandbags to raise levees above that mark. Projections of the river's second crest have been lowered to around 35.5 feet to 36 feet.
[Associated
Press;
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