back in 1997. Obviously it was a much smaller scale of disaster, but she said within days folks up there had "75 trailers behind my mother's house" set up for people who were displaced,and many more came later.
Also found this online...
'It's just mesmerizing'
Lucy Matejcek, whose home a mile north of Grand Forks was flooded eight years ago, has been glued to the television images.
"In a way now, it makes us feel lucky," she said. "We had a place to go. We were able to evacuate and didn't have to slog through four feet of water infested with snakes, sludge and chemicals. We never went hungry or lacked for water. We didn't have to hang out with corpses."
She finds it difficult to turn away from the images. "It's just mesmerizing," she said. "Once you're over the shock of acknowledging that the pictures you see are real, then you begin to wonder. It's unbelievable that the richest country in the world seems unable to help our country's most needy citizens.
"Some are calling it a national disgrace."
Matejcek said the government's response to the disaster has been "inept," most notably by FEMA. It's in sharp contrast to her surprise at how fast and efficient the government and disaster assistance agencies were in 1997.
"It's time for the nation to reset priorities," she said. "If we can't handle Mother Nature's act of terrorism, how are we able to handle a real act of terrorism?"
She said she can relate to some of the emotions of the hurricane victims, but not all because of the difference in scale.
"I know we never felt abandoned by our government," she said. "This is America, for Pete's sake."
http://www.twincities.com/mld/twincities/news/12561677.htm