Post-storm mop-up in Cook, Minn., started off easy enough Wednesday morning. But by afternoon, water — waist-deep in some parts — filled several downtown blocks.
The river rose and “you couldn’t stop it,” resident Kim Brunner said of the Little Fork River that runs through the city of 522 about 90 miles north of Duluth.
Businesses are shut down, roads are blocked off and “everything is at a standstill,” Brunner said, as water continued to rise.
The damage in Cook and vast swaths of Northeast Minnesota prompted St. Louis County to declare a disaster Thursday after the Tuesday night storm that drenched the region, flooding residential areas and cleaving some roads in half. About 170 campers at the YMCA Camp du Nord near Ely were stuck behind a washed-out road.
The County Board held an emergency meeting to ensure the county was eligible for federal and state relief aid. Commissioner Keith Nelson estimated at least $50 million in damages thus far, and county leaders said the storm ranks as the second-largest natural disaster in three decades, after a 2012 flood. Gov. Tim Walz is expected to survey damage in Biwabik, Minn., and Cook on Friday, with DFL Senate Majority Leader Erin Murphy and Sen. Grant Hauschild, DFL-Hermantown.
It’s critical to secure state support for rural areas that don’t have the resources of larger cities, Hauschild said.
“The community [of Cook] is really coming together ... and the state needs to step up as well,” he said.
Between 5 and 7 inches of rain fell around Cook. But floodwaters are not just from rain there, said Joe Moore, with Duluth’s National Weather Service.