By Blake Nicholson
Bismarck, North Dakota (AP)
The Army Corps of Engineers is not likely to make any formal decisions on Devils Lake dike work for at least another month, in part because the lake’s potential rise has made some of the agency’s studies outdated, a project manager says.
The corps is studying the possibility of a dike raise and alignment alternatives, as part of a $5 million project the agency began in late 2007.
Bismarck, North Dakota (AP)
The Army Corps of Engineers is not likely to make any formal decisions on Devils Lake dike work for at least another month, in part because the lake’s potential rise has made some of the agency’s studies outdated, a project manager says.
The corps is studying the possibility of a dike raise and alignment alternatives, as part of a $5 million project the agency began in late 2007.