FARGO, N.D. âĂ„Ă® As floodwaters threatened Fargo-Moorhead over the past week, college students âĂ„Ă® many whose families donâĂ„Ă´t live in the area âĂ„Ă® were essential in fortifying the cities against the rising waters of the Red River. Along with citizens from within and outside the community, they traded tests and term papers for the tedious and physically challenging work of filling, moving and stacking hundreds of thousands of sandbags throughout last week, and many marveled at the strength of the community of which theyâĂ„Ă´d become a part. Over the weekend, local students worked alongside those whoâĂ„Ă´d come from out of town, including some University of Minnesota students. But as the cities wait out the Red RiverâĂ„Ă´s sustained crest over the next few days, theyâĂ„Ă´ll have to do without many of those students. By Friday, two Moorhead campuses had evacuated, and with classes at all three major area colleges cancelled for another week, many students have left the area. After sandbagging around and moving artifacts out of the basement of a Moorhead museum Thursday night, Minnesota State University-Moorhead first-year Ryan Collins and three other Moorhead State students, all from the Twin Cities, returned to a campus dispatch center. Asked what theyâĂ„Ă´d been up to all week, they answered in unison: âĂ„Ăşsandbagging.âĂ„Ăą They said a few friends had been treating the time off classes like a long weekend, but most were volunteering. Though other classmates had gone home that week, they were all planning to stick around. But by the next afternoon, Collins was headed back to the Twin Cities. That morning, heâĂ„Ă´d gotten a knock on his dorm door and found the campus was being evacuated. Over the weekend, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities first-year Michelle Schultz helped take the place of sandbaggers that left town. After bussing up to Fargo at 6 a.m. Thursday, she sandbagged all day and into the night. At a south Fargo country club where she sandbagged until 12:30 a.m., Schultz said they had a lot of sand but not enough people, and the volunteer hotline wasnâĂ„Ă´t sending any out because they wanted people off the roads and in their own neighborhoods. âĂ„ĂşIt was frustrating,âĂ„Ăą she said, âĂ„Ăşthe sandbags were freezing, we were standing in water.âĂ„Ăą Heading back to the Twin Cities Sunday, Schultz said she was exhausted after just a couple days of work and said she gives âĂ„Ăşmajor creditâĂ„Ăą to students whoâĂ„Ă´d been at it all week. The city of Moorhead also asked Concordia College students to evacuate Friday, though the college had decided on their own the previous day to shut down campus. Concordia students had been âĂ„Ăşfirst respondersâĂ„Ăą to the initial call for volunteers, Concordia President Pam Jolicoeur said, since two other area colleges were still on spring break when the flood fight began. Students were very committed to fighting the flood, she said, but by Thursday, safety concerns along with a need to relieve pressure on the cityâĂ„Ă´s water and sewer system led her to declare a campus emergency and advise students to leave. She said the student body president had told her that students would only leave âĂ„Ăşif you tell them they have to,âĂ„Ăą which made her responsibility a little clearer, she said. College students were key to the areaâĂ„Ă´s flood-fighting efforts, Jolicoeur said. Even though many students arenâĂ„Ă´t from the area, she said they were âĂ„Ăşjust tireless.âĂ„Ăą
Students in uniform
As citizens keep watch on the weather and floodwater barriers, U.S. Coast Guard reserve members, including University political science junior Mike Kelleher, stand by and wait for the call to help stranded citizens or respond to other emergencies. Kelleher has been on flood duty with the coast guard since Monday night. So far he hasnâĂ„Ă´t been part of any rescue operations, and though itâĂ„Ă´s good news for the city that they havenâĂ„Ă´t needed it yet, âĂ„ĂşitâĂ„Ă´s tough to sit,âĂ„Ăą he said. While KelleherâĂ„Ă´s been on standby, Air National Guard member and North Dakota State business senior Monte Gehrtz has been sandbagging and keeping an eye on dikes. Friday night he spent 12 hours patrolling a one-mile stretch of sandbag dike, checking for leaks and frozen sump pump hoses. Residents set up these pumps behind their barriers to send back water that has seeped through.
âÄòI want to experience everythingâĂ„Ă´
While some students were evacuated or chose to leave, others, living off-campus and on the North Dakota State University campus, stayed in town. Moorhead State physics junior Deyan Mihaylov has been volunteering between six and eight hours daily, thanks to the medical study heâĂ„Ă´s participating in. HeâĂ„Ă´d have left the area for his girlfriendâĂ„Ă´s house in Grand Forks, he said, but heâĂ„Ă´s enrolled in a paid medical study that requires daily blood draws. As heâĂ„Ă´d been doing all week, Mihaylov, a native of Bulgaria, rode a packed school bus Friday afternoon along with three of his friends to a Moorhead sandbagging site. About 50 people poured off the bus and into the chilly air along the bank of the Red River floodwaters that already surrounded the riverside of one neighborhood home. For several hours, volunteers unloaded sandbags from a flatbed truck and passed them down a line of people who placed them on the shore of floodwaters that lapped at the yards of several neighborhood homes. While waiting to transition between sandbag locations in the neighborhood, Moorhead State junior Brandon Kuntz said when he heard class was cancelled last Monday he originally saw it as a vacation and took the day off. But he felt guilty about that, he said, and volunteered for the rest of the week. âĂ„ĂşEveryoneâĂ„Ă´s coming together,âĂ„Ăą he said, repeating a common sentiment. To him, itâĂ„Ă´s meant that people have put aside differences and worked willingly together regardless of whether they normally get along. But, he said, he expects that to wear off at some point. People werenâĂ„Ă´t out partying much this week, and he said the town âĂ„Ăşfeels like a war zone.âĂ„Ăą Though some of his classmates have gone home, Kuntz, whoâĂ„Ă´s from Bismarck, N.D ., said he doesnâĂ„Ă´t have a reason to do so âĂ„Ăşunless the town goes under.âĂ„Ăą âĂ„ĂşI want to experience everything,âĂ„Ăą he said. Saturday at the North Dakota State student center, zoology junior Kit Wong echoed that. Despite his parentâĂ„Ă´s pleas for him to come home, Wong said heâĂ„Ă´d rather be in Fargo, aware of whatâĂ„Ă´s going on and finding ways to help. After a week of manual labor, he was working at the volunteer registration desk in the student center, which was quiet on Saturday, as volunteers werenâĂ„Ă´t being called to sandbag. âĂ„ĂşNow it feels like the calm of the storm,âĂ„Ăą he said Saturday afternoon at the North Dakota State student center. He said after this week, Fargo feels more like home. On campus, âĂ„Ăşyou feel like you live in a bubble,âĂ„Ăą but being out in the community, he was reminded âĂ„Ăşacademics do matter, but in the end, people matter, lives matter.âĂ„Ăą North Dakota State senior Charlie Cunningham , who was helping coordinate Moorhead State dispatch center operations, said businesses, including local grocery stores, along with individuals and churches, had stocked the center with food. On Thursday night, pallets of food and water stacked about eight-feet high covered a tennis-court sized area in the buildingâĂ„Ă´s field house. Cunningham, who happens to be majoring in emergency management, said he sees the experience as a sort of âĂ„Ăşinformal internship.âĂ„Ăą After studying emergency situations in class, he said âĂ„Ăşbeing here and seeing it first hand is life-changing.âĂ„Ăą