The Commercial Appeal

Southern dams lack crisis plans

Homes, infrastruc­ture at risk in case of failure

- David A. Lieb, Michelle Minkoff and Sudhin Thanawala ASSOCIATED PRESS

When recent heavy rains swelled a private Mississipp­i lake and began eroding its earthen dam, Yazoo County Emergency Management Director Jack Willingham was scrambling for a plan.

He had no contact informatio­n for any of the homeowners who might need to evacuate, so he drove to the scene and began knocking on doors.

“I was just fortunate that this was a small area and I was able to do it on my own, door to door, grunt work,” Willingham said.

The dam just north of the state capital of Jackson had no official hazard rating, no record of state inspection­s and no formal emergency action plan mapping out the expected flood zone, whom to contact and whom to evacuate were it to fail. It’s one of more than 1,000 dams in Mississipp­i that remain unclassified because of a backlog of work for state regulators.

An Associated Press review also found hundreds of other dams lacking official emergency plans that are located dangerousl­y close to homes in Southeaste­rn states that have been swamped by heavy rains and severe flooding in recent weeks. The AP focused on highhazard dams – a rating determined by federal or state regulators that means the loss of human life is likely if a dam fails.

The AP review identified 578 highhazard dams regulated by state or federal agencies that lacked emergency action plans in North Carolina as of summer 2018. It found 259 such dams in Georgia, 111 in Mississipp­i and 101 in South Carolina. Though the specific numbers may have changed since then, the general problem has not.

“It’s important that every dam, and especially those that are considered high-hazard potential, have an emergency action plan,” said Mark Ogden, a former Ohio dam safety official who now is a technical specialist with the

Associatio­n of State Dam Safety Officials.

Emergency action plans can be useful for local government officials, emergency personnel responding to a disaster and people who live in valleys downstream from dams.

The emergency plan for Mississipp­i’s Oktibbeha County Lake Dam, which partially collapsed in a mudslide last month, lists the addresses and names of more than 100 property owners in the Starkville area who could be subject to evacuation if the dam fails. The plan includes color maps showing the potential inundation area and lists roads that would need to be closed. It also describes specific steps to be taken depending on the type of problem at the dam, with the phone numbers of various local and state emergency personnel who should be notified.

Mississipp­i requires emergency action plans for all high-hazard dams, as well as for some with significant hazard ratings, which apply to dams whose failure could damage multiple roads or public utilities but are unlikely to kill people.

The Yazoo County dam that developed problems during the recent rainstorms had not received a hazard rating because of a backlog at the state regulatory agency. It was one of several thousand previously unregulate­d dams that came to the attention of the Mississipp­i Department of Environmen­tal Quality during a 2016 survey of aerial images and geographic informatio­n system data, said William Mckercher, chief of the Dam Safety Division.

The survey doubled the dams in the state’s inventory from about 3,400 to 6,800, he said. Several years later, his office is still working to establish hazard levels for each dam, which would determine whether formal emergency plans and regular inspection­s are required.

Emergency action plans are mandated for all high-hazard dams by 43 states and Puerto Rico, according to a survey by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The exceptions include Alabama, the only state without a dam regulatory office, along with Florida, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Vermont and Wyoming.

Even in states that require emergency plans, the AP review shows some dams still lack them. That’s because many dams are privately owned, and state agencies have limited powers to force owners to hire profession­als to develop the plans, which can cost thousands of dollars.

In Georgia, state officials updated rules for emergency action plans in 2016 to make it clear that dam owners had to complete them, said Tom Woosley, manager of the state’s Safe Dams Program. Since then, the number of highhazard dams with emergency plans has steadily risen, although some private dam owners still aren’t complying.

Dam owners who shirk requiremen­ts to develop emergency plans could face fines in Georgia, but Woosley said he can’t recall that actually happening. In many cases, “the dam doesn’t generate money, so any money going towards a fine is money going away from fixing a dam,” Woosley said.

North Carolina in 2014 began requiring all dams designated as high- or intermedia­te-hazard to have emergency action plans. Since January 2019, the state has received 183 new emergency plans from dam owners. But 543 of the 1,272 high-hazard dams under the jurisdicti­on of the state Department of Environmen­tal Quality still lack emergency plans, as do 181 of the 247 intermedia­te hazard dams, department spokesman Rob Johnson said.

The department “is committed to bringing all dams into compliance with the law,” he said. But he said the “dam safety program is under-staffed and under-resourced,” with nearly 18 full-time employees to keep track of nearly 6,000 dams in the state.

That’s still significantly more staff than is available in Mississipp­i. The dam safety program there is authorized to have seven people but currently has just three because of vacancies, Mckercher said. The office is redirectin­g some of the unused money for staff salaries to hire contractor­s to complete emergency action plans for dams in defunct or underfunde­d watershed districts, he said.

Had the dam in Yazoo County’s Springridg­e Place subdivisio­n been previously inspected, officials might have noticed the clogged spillway pipes that caused water to flow over the top of the dam on Feb. 11 and wash away part of its embankment. And had an emergency action plan existed for the dam, it could have saved considerab­le stress for local emergency officials.

 ?? DAVID BATTALY/MISSISSIPP­I EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY VIA AP, FILE ?? An aerial photo shows a potential dam/levee failure in Yazoo County, Miss.
DAVID BATTALY/MISSISSIPP­I EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY VIA AP, FILE An aerial photo shows a potential dam/levee failure in Yazoo County, Miss.

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