Texarkana Gazette

Safety probe calls state’s dam crisis a ‘wake-up call’

California’s woes highlight dangers around the U.S.

- By Ellen Knickmeyer

SAN FRANCISCO—“Long-term and systemic failures” by California dam managers and regulators to recognize inherent constructi­on and design flaws at the tallest U.S. dam caused last year’s near-disaster there, an independen­t panel of dam safety experts said Friday, calling it a wake-up call for dam operators around the country.

Members of the Associatio­n of State Dam Safety Officials and the U.S. Society on Dams carried out an independen­t investigat­ion into the human and technical problems that caused the crisis at California’s Oroville Dam. The experts issued their report Friday.

Both spillways at the half-century-old Oroville Dam gave way in February 2017, forcing 200,000 people downstream to be evacuated. The feared uncontroll­ed release of massive amounts of water over the top did not happen, and residents were allowed to return home days later.

The independen­t panel of safety experts said the dam was badly built from the start in the 1960s.

The principal designer of the spillway told the dam-safety team that he had just completed post-graduate work at the time he worked on the Oroville project decades ago, had had no previous engineerin­g employment beyond two summer stints, and had never designed a spillway before.

The crisis started when massive chunks of the dam’s main concrete spillway suddenly began washing away.

The report faulted California’s Department of Water Resources, which owns and operates the dam, an anchor of California’s water system, and dam regulators for allegedly failing to recognize and address problems in the 770foot structure over decades of inspection­s and reviews.

“There were many opportunit­ies to intervene and prevent the incident,” the experts concluded.

The state has said repairs to the structure will cost more than $500 million. Residents and businesses downstream, including in the 19,000-resident town of Oroville at the foot of the dam, have filed more than $1 billion in damage claims.

“Repairing a dam is great … but what’s happened to the view of Oroville as a safe place to live?” asked David Steindorf of American Whitewater, one of the environmen­tal groups that had long complained that the state ignored concerns about the dam’s constructi­on flaws.

“There’s a lot of long-term impacts that need to be addressed.”

The experts said the Oroville crisis made clear that it was essential for dam managers and inspectors to review original dam constructi­on in light of modern engineerin­g practices.

“Like many other large dam owners, DWR has been somewhat overconfid­ent and complacent regarding the integrity of its civil infrastruc­ture,” the experts said.

In a statement, Joel Ledesma, a deputy director at the water agency, said state officials had supported the independen­t review “so we can learn from the past and continue to improve now and into the future.”

“We will carefully assess this report, share it with the entire dam-safety community and incorporat­e the lessons learned going forward,” Grant Davis, the agency’s director, said in the statement.

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