Flood — Mclean, North Dakota
2011-06-02 to 2011-06-30 · near Riverdale, Mclean, North Dakota
Event narrative
See the event episode narrative for details.
Wider weather episode
This was part of historic flooding in North Dakota with statewide costs estimated around 1.5 billion dollars. Flooding was the result of significant winter snows and significant spring rains, not only in North Dakota but in Montana as well. Rocky Mountain snowpack was four to six times normal. Flooding was along the Missouri River from the Garrison Dam to the South Dakota border. Dams were overwhelmed by the amount of water. Flooding included river, ground, and overland types. Estimated damages were in the hundreds of millions of dollars and that is not all inclusive. There was a significant loss to agriculture by not being able to plant. A tremendous flood fight was waged against the river, and that cost is not included here. Storm Data cannot reflect the scope of this event. Information is what was available at the time of this writing. Refer to newspaper articles and other federal, state, and local sources for detailed information.
Here are some facts about the flooding in North Dakota provided by North Dakota Emergency Management. The total estimated flood cost was around $1.5 billion. Individual and housing assistance was $323 million; small business $248 million; home and business reconstruction $452 million; public response, recovery, and mitigation $480 million; disaster unemployment for 866 claims was $2.3 million; and the public finance authority disaster loan program approved $56.6 million. Public infrastructure costs were $320 million. Of the state's 53 counties, 48 were impacted, along with three tribal nations.
The Missouri River was in flood in every state in the United States of America that it runs through. This was a multi-state disaster.
View location on OpenStreetMap → (47.4318, -101.4752)
Source: NOAA Storm Events Database, event_id 356277. Narrative written by the NWS forecast office that issued the report.