Los Angeles Times

Heavy rain may have undermined spillway

Report details hillside erosion, offering first glimpse from officials on lead-up to failure at Oroville Dam.

- By Paige St. John and Joseph Serna

OROVILLE, Calif. — Rainwater erosion alongside the Oroville Dam’s main spillway appears to have contribute­d to the heavy damage that prompted a crisis, forcing more than 100,000 to be evacuated from their homes, a report reviewed by The Times showed.

A summary of the incident, prepared by state water officials four days after the crater in the concrete chute appeared, said water from heavy rains hit the hillsides where the massive concrete spillway runs.

Flowing water during heavy rains was “diverted ... effectivel­y eroding and underminin­g the spillway, causing a section to collapse,” said the incident summary.

The report offers the first indication from officials of what might have caused the catastroph­ic failure of the spillway. It’s unclear whether the rainwater was a primary reason for the spillway damage or one of many.

The spillway follows the slope of a dirt- and tree-

covered hill that helps secure the towering dam, which is America’s tallest. The spillway fracture began as a 200-foot-wide hole that was 35 feet deep, but over the last week it has gotten significan­tly worse. Photograph­s of the initial damage show soil washed away beneath the sidewall of the concrete spillway and along its outer edge.

The damage to the spillway began a chain of events that led to the mass evacuation­s. Officials shut off releases to the spillway to investigat­e, and that caused water levels at Lake Oroville to rise. Then a storm dumped more rain than expected, causing the lake to exceed its limits and push water down an unpaved emergency spillway.

On Sunday, officials detected encroachin­g gullies that threatened that emergency spillway and, fearing that it could collapse, ordered numerous communitie­s downstream to evacuate. Since then, officials have been using the damaged main spillway to lower the level of the reservoir, easing the crisis.

The state Department of Water Resources has provided no public statements on the cause of the collapse. Agency spokesman Chris Orrock, at the incident command post in Oroville on Thursday morning, said the cause remained under investigat­ion.

Orrock confirmed that the incident summary refers to the initial damage and not to subsequent damage to the concrete spillway that occurred when it was put back into use.

Bill Croyle, acting director of the Department of Water Resources, said determinin­g the cause of the spillway collapse could take months.

Officials have estimated that fixing the spillway could cost $200 million or more. Because the spillway has been used to reduce the water levels at the reservoir, officials said they still need to assess the level of damage.

Records show the same section of spillway was repaired in 2013 but do not provide details.

Large swaths of Northern California are on track to experience their wettest winter on record, with many areas having already surpassed their average precipitat­ion for an entire year. A new series of storms is set to hit the Oroville area over the next few days. But officials are confident they’ve drained the reservoir enough that the rains won’t overwhelm it a second time.

With the reservoir’s water level down more than 30 feet since Sunday and getting lower, Croyle said at a news conference Thursday that engineers will slow releases down the Oroville Dam’s damaged main spillway from 100,000 cubic feet of water per second to 80,000 cubic feet per second over a period of several hours.

The reduction will allow crews to move into the concrete channel to clear out trees, branches and other debris that has clogged the spillway and forced the downstream hydroelect­ric plant to go offline, Croyle said.

There was no estimate on when the power plant would be back up and running, but it will probably not be before Monday, he said.

Meanwhile, the herculean effort to reinforce the emergency spillway before more rain arrives used a caravan of helicopter­s and trucks to fill three deep fissures in the dirt hillside with rocks and cement.

As of Thursday, repairs on one erosion site were completed, the second was 25% filled, and the third was 69% filled, Croyle said.

As long as the lake doesn’t reach capacity, Croyle said, the emergency spillway won’t be used.

The incoming storm system is weaker than the one that overwhelme­d the lake last week after the dam’s main spillway eroded to the point of fracture, Croyle said.

paige.stjohn @latimes.com Twitter: @paigestjoh­n joseph.serna @latimes.com Twitter: @JosephSern­a St. John reported from Oroville, Serna from Los Angeles. Times staff writer Veronica Rocha contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ??
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times
 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? HELICOPTER­S FERRY sand and rocks on Thursday to the Oroville Dam’s emergency spillway, where crews worked to fill fissures in the dirt hillside before more rain arrives. As long as Lake Oroville doesn’t reach capacity, officials said, the emergency...
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times HELICOPTER­S FERRY sand and rocks on Thursday to the Oroville Dam’s emergency spillway, where crews worked to fill fissures in the dirt hillside before more rain arrives. As long as Lake Oroville doesn’t reach capacity, officials said, the emergency...

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