Authorities across the state said Saturday that they believe they can handle the anticipated flooding — unless another torrential downpour is dumped on the region in the coming days.
Workers and volunteers finished building up levees and dikes, adding pumps and sectioning off roads with concrete barriers in anticipation of rising rivers and swelling lakes that are expected to test the flood-protection measures statewide.
It left authorities optimistic that there would be no disastrous effects if rainfall is normal.
But "if we start adding 2, 3, 4 inches of rain, all bets are off," said Craig Schmidt, a hydrologist at the National Weather Service in Chanhassen. "There's just nowhere for this to go. Every corner [of the state] — from International Falls to I-90 [is experiencing flooding]. It's unusual to get this much rain for this long."
It's too late for many residents like some homeowners in Henderson, who had to evacuate homes damaged in a landslide. And this month's rainfall — on record as the rainiest June since 1874 — already has closed roads and bridges, inundated farm fields and destroyed homeowners' basements.
Now, already overfull wetlands, lakes and rivers will be tested with a predicted 1 to 2 inches of rain for Sunday.
"Things start to creep up and then they start to recede and then just when you think it's crested, it rains," said Kris Eide, Minnesota's Director of Homeland Security and Emergency Management. "It's really like bad spring flooding; it's just spread across the state."
Like spring flooding, cities are now in a holding pattern, waiting to see if sandbags and levees can hold back more rain.