NEVADA DAM FAILURE AND HOLE IN OROVILLE DAM SPILLWAY HIGHLIGHT PROBLEMS WITH AGING DAMS

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Source: American Rivers

Photo: Oroville dam spillway overflows for first time in history: Butte County Sheriff via Twitter

February 11, 2017 (Washington) – The failure of a dam in northern Nevada Thursday and the appearance of a 30-foot deep hole in the spillway of the nation’s tallest dam – Oroville Dam in California – highlight the crumbling of our nation’s water infrastructure and the danger posed by aging dams.

The earthen Twentyone Mile Dam on Thousand Springs Creek in Elko County, Nevada burst following heavy rains. On the Feather River in California, erosion created a hole in the concrete spillway of the 770-foot tall Oroville Dam. Nobody was injured in the Nevada dam failure and officials say the hole in Oroville Dam’s spillway does not endanger the integrity of the dam or safety of downstream communities.

 According to the Association of State Dam Safety Officials, America’s dams are degrading faster than they are being repaired, the number of high hazard dams has increased over time, and the cost to rehabilitate dams continues to rise. 

 By 2020, seventy percent of dams in the United States will be more than 50 years old. Aging dams can pose a serious safety threat for individuals and entire communities.

 Bob Irvin, President of American Rivers, made the following statement:

 “Outdated dams can threaten communities. When they fail, they can destroy lives and property. Thankfully nobody was injured in Elko County, but this event raises the alarm about the danger that aging dams pose to many communities.”

 “It is critical we make the right investments to ensure our rivers are healthy and our nation’s water infrastructure is safe. More frequent and intense storms and floods are straining aging dams and other infrastructure.”

 “Where appropriate, communities are using dam removal as a solution to address the problem of dangerous, outdated dams,” he said.

 American Rivers said that states can strengthen their dam safety programs by:

  • Making it the responsibility of dam owners to inspect and maintain their dams
  • Requiring more frequent, detailed inspections of hazardous dams
  • Increasing penalties for unsafe dams and violations
  • Requiring dam owners to ensure that funds are available to repair or remove dams in the event they can’t or won’t meet safety standards.   

American Rivers protects wild rivers, restores damaged rivers and conserves clean water for people and nature. Since 1973, American Rivers has protected and restored more than 150,000 miles of rivers through advocacy efforts, on-the-ground projects and an annual America’s Most Endangered Rivers® campaign. Headquartered in Washington, DC, American Rivers has offices across the country and more than 250,000 members, supporters and volunteers.

https://www.americanrivers.org/conservation-resource/dam-failures-highlight-problems-aging-dams/


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Comments

We have no money...

....except to spend on legal defense of ILLEGAL immigrants.

Jerry Brown is just one of many Idiots in Sacramento

The politicians in Sacramento along with the Governors office have let the State of California down to such a degree that now we face dire consequences of major infrastructure failures. The last 5 years should have been spent on firming up the existing water reservoirs in the state and building new water storage capabilities. Rather, governor Moonbeam and his cronies want to do another 'water grab' with the twin tunnels, and they want to build a useless high speed rail between two areas nobody cares to visit. How about some maintenance on what we already have built? How about one more lane on I-5 between Sacramento and LA? How about desalination plants for So.CAL so they don't continue to steal water from No.CAL? How about more dams? This state has been run into the ground by a bunch of loser politicians who are beholden to a few deep pockets in agriculture and the LA area. Here's and idea; how about we drain the swamp in Sacramento?

jerry brown is an idiot

California had more than 10 years for the drought to end and instead of getting the state's water management act together, brown diverted funds to his train to nowhere.