Porterville Recorder

State launches overall safety review at tallest U.S. dam

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN FRANCISCO — California is launching an overall safety review of the nation’s tallest dam to pinpoint any needed upgrades in the half-century-old structure, water officials said Wednesday, launching the kind of overarchin­g review called for by an independen­t national panel of experts in September following the collapse of two spillways at Oroville Dam.

Experts from the national Associatio­n of State Dam Safety Officials and the U.S. Society on Dams concluded that state officials would have been able to catch the problems that led to the collapses if they had reviewed the 1960s’ design and constructi­on of the dam using modern engineerin­g standards.

Federal, state and private experts will work on the comprehens­ive review of the 770-foot dam, said Joel Ledesma, deputy director of the State Water Project at the California Department of Water Resources, which operates the structure.

Authoritie­s ordered nearly 200,000 people downstream of the dam to evacuate in February when both spillways suddenly began crumbling. The feared uncontroll­ed releases of water over the dam did not occur, and authori- ties allowed residents to return to their homes within days.

Water agency director Grant Davis said crews have now completed the first phase of repairs to the damaged main spillway, ensuring it can be used to release water from the reservoir if needed during the coming winter rainy season.

Davis called the fastpaced repairs of recent months “a stunning feat,” but acknowledg­ed the fears of residents who fled from the path of the dam last winter.

“You indeed had a terrifying experience, and we are working hard to see this never happens again,” Davis said.

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