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Construction of the levee had been slated to start in June but was delayed because of weeks of heavy rain. "We recommended that the contractor not start that construction, of course, because for him to punch a hole in the levee right now and start reconstructing it ... that would be suicide," Heinold said. He said construction would have to wait until the river retreated, which may not happen until August. The city was monitoring the river and levees although the river was expected to stay within the levee system when it crests Thursday evening at 27.4 feet, more than 4 feet about flood stage, according to the Army Corps of Engineer' river gauge website. The record crest is 31.7 feet during the flood of 1993. In 2008, the river reached 31.6 feet. A few days of sunny and dry weather provided some relief and led the Corps to delay the planned release of water from Wednesday until Thursday. Authorities have not ordered residents to evacuate the area, but some have packed up and headed to higher ground in recent days. Clark said he planned to stay. "I'm going to stay here until they make me leave and protect what we've
got here," he said. ___ Online:
[Associated
Press;
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