The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Drought a distant memory as Lanier nears record level

With more rain predicted, how far lake may yet rise is unclear.

- By Amanda C. Coyne Amanda.Coyne@ajc.com

Heavy winter rains have pushed Lake Lanier to its highest water levels in 42 ye ars, and residents who once endured years of drought are discoverin­g a different set of problems.

“I would either need to swim or kayak out to my dock to access my boat right now,” said Joanna Cloud from her lakefront home in Cumming.

The high waters are lapping into the yards of homes and overtaking docks and walkways, said Cloud, the Lake Lanier Associatio­n’s executive director. Docks moored in ground that is now soft or underwater are beginning to float away.

The Army Corps of Engineers,

which oversees Lanier and the Buford Dam, says that despite the problems, they cannot safely release water to significan­tly lower the lake’s level. Sending water down the river as more rain is predicted this weekend could potentiall­y cause flooding in areas to the south. Another 2 to 3 inches of rain is predicted for metro Atlanta through Sunday.

The water level in Lake Lanier on Thursday afternoon stood at 1,075 feet, which is nearly 5 feet above what is considered “full pool,” according to Channel 2 Action News meteorolog­ist Katie Walls. On Feb. 24, the lake reached a level not seen since 1977, topping out at 1,076.11 feet, the third highest level on record, Walls said.

For residents, it’s a stark contrast to recent droughts. It was only in 2007 when the lake stood at 1,050 feet, or more than 20 feet below full pool. According to the Geor- gia Emergency Management Agency, that drought lasted until 2009 and left docks sit- ting in dry mud.

The risk to the public posed by the rising waters is partially mitigated simply because it’s offseason for the lake; few people are out boating, fishing and swim- ming in the damp late-winter weather. However, floating debris such as logs or fallen trees that have washed off the shores is causing a prob- lem for docks and boats.

At least four unmoored docks have been reported drifting in the lake, and Cloud is trying to corral two runaway boats that have been battering a nearby dock.

The lake is so high at Cloud’s home that it almost reaches an outlet on her dock’s electrical box. That poses a public safety issue, as the electricit­y from those boxes can travel through water, Cloud said.

“There are 10,000 docks on Lake Lanier. I can’t tell you all 10,000 have turned off the power to the breaker box,” Cloud said. Those with electrical boxes that may be near the high waters should cut off the power from their home circuit breaker, Cloud said.

The Army Corps is work- ing to manage the level of the lake without overflowin­g the Chattahooc­hee River it feeds into. The Corps is still releas- ing water from the dam, but the flow has been reduced by about two-thirds, Walls said. Because both bodies of water are already high, there’s only so much water the Corps can release.

“You can’t just let the floodgates open. It would flood Atlanta,” Cloud said. “If there was a great big drought downstream, we could release more, but we have to meter it out to protect the citizens south of us.”

Water releases from the Buford Dam have brought the Chattahooc­hee River’s levels just below flood stage. The river is moving at “very high flow levels” too dangerous for activities like kayaking and fishing, according to Jason Ulseth of the Chattahooc­hee Riverkeepe­r.

“Looking at the river, the flows are about as high as I’ve ever seen them,” Ulseth said.

One spot in Duluth where the water is typically 2 feet high was recorded at 10 feet on Tuesday, Channel 2 meteorolog­ist Eboni Deon said.

The Chattahooc­hee has suffered from the relentless rains as much as Lanier, Ulseth said. The dam releases have caused “high levels of erosion” on the banks of the Chattahooc­hee within 12 miles of Buford Dam, Ulseth said. Erosion allows more sediment to enter the water and makes riverbanks “deteriorat­e over time,” Ulseth said.

For now, the reduced dam releases will continue. And the rain may continue to fall.

It’s not clear when water levels will start to subside, as rainfall is only one determinin­g factor in the lake’s level, Cloud said. For now, all that can be done is to wait.

“It could take a couple weeks,” Cloud said. “It could take a couple months.”

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? February 2019: Lake Lanier’s water encroaches Thursday on Mary Alice Park near Cumming. Lake levels are the highest they’ve been since 1977, according to Channel 2 Action News.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM February 2019: Lake Lanier’s water encroaches Thursday on Mary Alice Park near Cumming. Lake levels are the highest they’ve been since 1977, according to Channel 2 Action News.
 ?? AJC 2012 ?? November 2012: More than six years ago at the same spot, floating docks were resting on dry land at Mary Alice Park. The lake level was 1,058 feet, 13 feet below full pool, echoing the last days of a 2007-09 drought that ravaged the state.
AJC 2012 November 2012: More than six years ago at the same spot, floating docks were resting on dry land at Mary Alice Park. The lake level was 1,058 feet, 13 feet below full pool, echoing the last days of a 2007-09 drought that ravaged the state.

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