NDSU alumnus Scott Satermo is in the very thick of Fargo's
battle against the Red River floodwaters. As the owner of Rising
Sun Construction and North Core Corp., his crews are helping to
build Fargo's temporary emergency dike system - the city's major
line of defense.
Working around the clock, Satermo's crews are responsible for the
dikes from 7th Avenue North to the Ridgewood area of the city
near 19th Avenue North. Those clay dikes are holding the waters
back from the Oak Grove neighborhood, Mickelson Park and the El
Zagel golf course.
The Corps of Engineers informed Satermo at 8 p.m. on Thursday,
March 19, his crews needed to be on site by 7 a.m. the next
morning. That gave him less than 12 hours to get equipment in
place and notify his staff.
"We had to scramble," Satermo said, as he took a short break on
Wednesday afternoon. "We've been going 24 hours a day, running
four to five crews constantly since we got the call. We've got
four bulldozers, two backhoes, three loaders and three skid
steers, and there are 15 to 20 people going all the time."
Employees of both of his companies, which have offices in Fargo
and Omaha, Neb., are working at least 12-hour shifts. "We get
short-handed sometimes, but the guys jump right in and run even
longer shifts," explained Satermo, who graduated from NDSU in
1996 with a major in civil engineering. "We've brought on all of
my employees to get this job done."
Satermo looks at this flood with an experienced eye, because he
was a city engineer for the City of Fargo during the 1997 flood.
"We seemed to have more time in '97," he said. "The southern part
of the city has grown so much since then; so the city has a
massive amount of work to get done. It's pretty
overwhelming."
The dikes Satermo's crews have built stand at 42 feet at
locations south of 12th Avenue North and 41 feet on the north
side of that roadway. But, there's more work to do after
Wednesday afternoon's flood projection. His crews now need to
raise the dikes to 43 feet.
As he turned back to the flood fight, Satermo wanted to express
his appreciation to the employees, volunteers and neighbors who
have joined in this struggle.
"You've got an array of contractors working with the city, the
Corps of Engineers and the schools. Everybody is working
together; the communication has been great," Satermo said.
"Everybody is doing whatever they can, and that is reassuring
that we can get it done."