A week of intermittent thunderstorms has made life on Prior Lake awfully soggy for residents like Matt Brei, who trudged in waders through knee-high water to get his 3-year-old son to preschool last week after water encircled their home.
So, after talking to his neighbors and doing some quick research on flood dikes, Brei, 38, organized a sandbagging operation that filled, hauled and laid about 5,000 bags around his Glendale Avenue cul-de-sac, a nearby park and three homes.
By Sunday afternoon, their peninsula neighborhood was looking better, thanks to the dike, an army of volunteers and a big hydraulic pump loaned by Hydro Engineering of Norwood Young America, where Brei's wife is an executive.
Stories like that played out across the greater Twin Cities area through the weekend as one storm after another punished the region.
The National Weather Service in Chanhassen said Sunday that 2014 has been the wettest year to date on record, with 25.82 inches of precipitation — far surpassing the previous record of 22.2 inches set in 1965. Despite sunny skies for most of Sunday, the walking trails at Lake Nokomis in Minneapolis remained underwater in places and ducks were swimming on the fairways of Hiawatha Golf Course.
Through Sunday, rainfall for June measured 11.35 inches at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. That's just 0.32 inches short of the record 11.67 inches that fell in 1874, meteorologist Chris Franks said. Meanwhile, heavy rain Friday caused part of the roof of St. Mary's School in Morris to collapse in western Minnesota. No one was injured, officials said.
Also Sunday, Sen. Amy Klobuchar said the Federal Emergency Management Agency will begin to compile its preliminary damage assessment on Tuesday to start the process of bringing federal help to state and counties with public infrastructure damage. Speaking from a damp Harriet Island in St. Paul, Klobuchar said FEMA's assessment will take about a week.
Klobuchar's next stop Sunday was going to be Norwood Young America in Carver County, where up to 9 inches of rain overwhelmed the city's wastewater treatment facility and caused 30 feet of raw sewage to back up.