Santa Fe New Mexican

Rural Utah residents worry over leaking dam

- By Brittany Peterson and Hannah Schoenbaum

SALT LAKE CITY — Workers hurriedly tried to shore up a rural Utah dam after a 60-foot crack sent water pouring into a creek and endangerin­g the 1,800 residents of a downstream town.

State and local leaders don’t think the Panguitch Lake Dam is in imminent danger of breaking open but have told residents to be prepared to evacuate if conditions worsen.

Emergency management officials passed out a list of evacuation procedures to worried residents at a Wednesday evening town meeting meant to mitigate panic.

“I can’t say that the emergency situation is entirely averted, but I’m very, very encouraged by the progress we’ve made today,” Everett Taylor, an assistant state engineer for dam safety with the Utah Division of Water Rights, told residents of the southern Utah town.

Lowering the reservoir to below the affected area will take several days, he said. About 2 feet of water remained above the crack as of Wednesday evening, and workers had covered nearly 45 feet of the crack with boulders.

An ice sheet on the reservoir had pushed up against the dam, causing the top to crack and tilt downstream, with water gushing through the opening, Taylor explained.

His staff was able to relieve some of the pressure against the dam by making large cuts across the ice sheet.

The ice has now pulled away, and the top of the dam has tilted back, he said.

Local officials discovered the fissure in the upper portion of the dam during an inspection Monday night, and state officials announced it to the public Tuesday. The state has labeled it a level 2 breach risk — a designatio­n in the middle of the three-prong scale that means there is potential for dam failure.

If a breach occurs, state and local law enforcemen­t will work with the Red Cross to evacuate Panguitch, which sits about 10 miles downstream from the dam.

Another tiny town, Circlevill­e, is farther downstream and faces a lower flood risk.

Sgt. Jacob Cox of the Utah Highway Patrol, which has been tasked with helping prepare the town in case of an evacuation, told residents Wednesday they should have ample time to gather their belongings and evacuate safely.

“This can be orderly,” he said. “If the notice is that the dam has broken or breached, we have time. The estimation is roughly two hours before those floodwater­s are really inundating the town.”

Sirens will sound in the event of an evacuation, and officers will go door to door to make sure everyone has cleared the area, Garfield County Sheriff Eric Houston said.

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