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N.D., Minn. consider $962M flood plan

U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Jon Scarber, a flight engineer, looks out over the flooded Red River along the North Dakota/Minnesota border from a CH-47D Chinook helicopter on April 1, 2009. The Montana Army National Guard is assisting flood relief efforts and is conducting orientation flights to familiarize aviators and Soldiers with possible hazards in the region. (UPI Photo/Roger M. Dey/U.S. Army)
1 of 4 | U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Jon Scarber, a flight engineer, looks out over the flooded Red River along the North Dakota/Minnesota border from a CH-47D Chinook helicopter on April 1, 2009. The Montana Army National Guard is assisting flood relief efforts and is conducting orientation flights to familiarize aviators and Soldiers with possible hazards in the region. (UPI Photo/Roger M. Dey/U.S. Army) | License Photo

MOORHEAD, Minn., Nov. 28 (UPI) -- Leaders of Fargo, N.D., and Moorhead, Minn., are moving to support a $962 million flood control plan for the Red River, observers say.

Support is coalescing around an option to essentially build a new emergency river channel for the flood-prone, north-flowing river that would stretch 25 miles around Moorhead, the Star Tribune of Minneapolis reported Saturday.

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Under the plans, the new channel -- which would be opened during times of extreme flood danger -- would be 30 feet deep and wide enough to carry more than twice as much water than the Mississippi River carries through downtown Minneapolis on a typical day, the newspaper said.

Residents of Fargo and Moorhead staged massive sandbagging efforts this spring to save their cities from extensive flooding, 11 years after catastrophically high river levels inundated the cities.

The Star Tribune said the plan is actually the smallest of several flood control options that North Dakota and Minnesota officials are considering presenting to the Army Corps of Engineers for possible funding, with a final decision expected in January.

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