A weekend of torrential rains left homeowners piling up sandbags along Minnehaha Creek, untreated sewage flowing into area lakes and runners on the sidelines Sunday.
Storm totals varied widely across the metro area, from just under 3 inches at Minneapolis-St. Paul Airport to nearly 5 inches in Spring Park.
There's a chance of more showers Monday morning before clearing around midday.
An already swollen Minnehaha Creek continued to rise in St. Louis Park and Edina Sunday as homeowners hauled sandbags and manned pumps in hopes that they could keep the floodwaters out of their homes and maybe, just maybe, salvage their freshly planted gardens.
Schar and Charlie Gross have lived on Cascade Lane in Edina for 25 years. About a dozen yards from their back door, the creek — even when it's running high — usually stays 5 or 6 inches below the lip of their retaining wall. On Sunday, the water spilled over three layers of sandbags already sitting atop the wall as the couple, along with friends and neighbors, were adding three more.
In Eden Prairie, a mudslide opened an 80-foot ravine in the back yards of two homes on Burr Ridge Lane. An excavator that had been brought in three weeks ago to do a small storm sewer repair sat at the bottom of the ravine and the porch and deck of a home that once sat on flat ground teetered precariously over the huge hole.
Untreated sewage from Mound was released at six sites near local lakes Sunday after the heavy rains threatened to force backed-up wastewater into the basements of about 1,000 homes.
City officials said the sanitary sewer system was "overwhelmed" by the amount of rain and it received permission from the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency to bypass the untreated sewage until the wastewater collection system can handle the volume. Sewage will make its way into Lake Minnetonka, Lake Dutch and Lake Langdon, where it will be greatly diluted, but officials warned that the level of E. coli bacteria will increase and could cause illness.