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School spokeswoman AnnMarie Campbell said the school should be safe this year with the 38-foot predicted crest, about 3 feet lower than the record set in 2009. "We're very confident we won't have any issues," Campbell said. "We feel 38 feet is very manageable." But others aren't so sure, and some of Butler's neighbors are thinking it might be time to leave. Edward Schmidt, who lives across from the school, stacked "a few thousand" sandbags around him home with the help of students and neighbors. "Last year, I got water in my basement because I didn't have enough sandbags," Schmidt said. "We did the best we could do this year." Unlike Butler, Schmidt said he and his wife are considering a buyout. "We love living here, but we understand we may to have to move," said Schmidt, who has lived in the home for 23 years. City spokeswoman Karena Carlson said Fargo has spent $7.4 million buying 25 homes in low-lying neighborhoods since last year's flood. She said an additional seven homes are expected to be purchased by the time the river crests Sunday. The buyouts, which are funded with city sales tax money, have ranged from $69,000 to $1.1 million, the latter of which was for a home owned by James and Margo McCulley. James McCulley, a retired orthodontist, said his family didn't have a choice. They had to leave because the home was in the path of a planned permanent floodwall. The couple moved this month to another house on higher ground several miles away. "It was my dream house," Margo McCulley said. "But it was just a house. Wherever we live is our home."
[Associated
Press;
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