(AP/CSi) —  Gov. Doug Burgum, Agriculture Commissioner Doug Goehring, and other state officials will meet with local officials and community members on Monday, Oct 21, in Fargo, Grand Forks and Jamestown and hold a town hall meeting in Fessenden to hear about the impacts of North Dakota’s unusually wet fall and last weekend’s record-breaking early snowstorm and to discuss the state’s response efforts.

In Jamestown

A meeting with local government officials and other stakeholders, at 2:15 to 4:15 p.m. Monday, Oct 21 at the Jamestown Civic Center.

Burgum and Goehring will visit with farmers and ranchers to get a better understanding of the impacts being felt during this harvest season and discuss measures North Dakota is taking to help ease the strain of those economic and emotional hardships. Burgum said Friday he will ask for federal help in dealing with the widespread flooding that occurred in the aftermath of heavy snow that fell last week.

Information on meeting times and locations is below.

The storm dropped more than 2 feet (600 centimeters) of snow in central and eastern parts of the state, closed major highways, canceled school, snarled air traffic, caused power outages and flattened unharvested crops across central and eastern North Dakota.

Widespread flooding has occurred as the snow melts. Seven counties — Barnes, Cavalier, Grand Forks, LaMoure, Stutsman, Traill and Walsh — and the cities of Jamestown, LaMoure and Valley City issued flood emergency declarations.

Burgum’s spokesman Mike Nowatzki said more cities and counties are expected to be added to the list.

Losses are still being assessed. Burgum and North Dakota Agriculture Commissioner Doug Goehring are scheduled to meet with officials, community members, farmers and ranchers next week in Fargo, Grand Forks, Jamestown and Fessenden to learn more about the impact of the storm.

Once an assessment is complete, the governor is expected to declare an emergency for affected areas, Nowatzki said, which is a step toward pursuing a presidential disaster declaration that could pave the way for federal aid.

“Everything is pointing in that direction,” Nowatzki said.

A separate request also would be forwarded to the U.S. Department of Agriculture for a secretarial disaster designation that would be aimed at helping farmers and ranchers, he said.