The Mercury News Weekend

Lack of warning raises alarm

Causes behind ‘surprise’ give experts big reason to probe

- By Ellen Knickmeyer

SAN FRANCISCO — The sudden collapse of spillways at the nation’s highest dam has raised alarm among those building, running and regulating big dams around the world because it seemed to come with little warning that the spillways were on the verge of failing, dam experts investigat­ing the crisis at California’s Oroville Dam said Thursday.

February’s breakup of the main spillway and then the backup spillway at the 770-foot-high Oroville Dam stands as an “extremely significan­t” event among dam disasters and near-disasters in modern U.S. history, said John France, an engineer leading the investigat­ion by two national trade associatio­ns representi­ng damsafety and dam-engineerin­g profession­als.

The significan­ce was only partly due to the size of the Northern California dam, France said.

Unlike most dam failures, which happen in flooding and after signs that a structure is being overwhelme­d by water, “what happened was a surprise,” France said.

“I’m sure there are lessons to be learned,” he said. “I’m confident they’re going to be significan­t and change the practice of dam safety engineerin­g in the country and perhaps in the world.”

The national Associatio­n of State Dam Safety Officials and the United States Society on Dams created the independen­t panel to try to identify the operationa­l and physical failures that made the two spillways at Oroville Dam give way.

Authoritie­s ordered the evacuation of nearly 200,000 people below the dam on Feb. 12 with an hour’s notice, fearing the disintegra­tion of the spillways and the hillside around them could lead to massive, uncontroll­ed releases of water. Residents were allowed to return home in two days.

The dam holds back the state’s second-largest reservoir and is an anchor of the state’s complex northsouth water delivery.

Federal and state agencies that manage and oversee Oroville Dam also are conducting separate investigat­ions into the spillway failures.

State officials with the Department of Water Resources, which runs the half-century-old dam, at times have pointed to the torrents of runoff pouring into the dam at the time of the crisis. But the amount of water streaming down the two flood-release spillways when they began to collapse was relatively small.

The state water agency and others involved are cooperatin­g with the inde- pendent probe by the dam groups.

The independen­t probe will cover everything from the preliminar­y work leading up to Oroville’s constructi­on in the 1960s to this winter’s spillways failures, members of the investigat­ion team said.

“We recognize how significan­t this incident is,” said Dan Wade, another member of the investigat­ing team and a program director for the San Francisco Public Utility Commission.

Dam profession­als around the country, many of them working with dams as old or older than Oroville, want independen­t and thorough answers on the Oroville crisis, he said.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I/ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? Constructi­on crews clear rocks away from Oroville Dam's crippled spillway in Oroville. The sudden collapse of spillways at the nation's highest dam was unique because it came without warning.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I/ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES Constructi­on crews clear rocks away from Oroville Dam's crippled spillway in Oroville. The sudden collapse of spillways at the nation's highest dam was unique because it came without warning.

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