The Mercury News Weekend

Oroville mayor upset over communicat­ions

Dahlmeier blasts statewater officials over the breakdown

- By Jonathan J. Cooper The Associated Press

SACRAMENTO » Oroville’s mayor said Thursday she knew about cracks in the replacemen­t spillway at the troubled dam nearby and is not concerned, but heaped criticism on state water officials for failing to communicat­e with her town.

Linda Dahlmeier said the Department of Water Resources should have proactivel­y communicat­ed that cracks were expected but has instead created a “firestorm” in a community that was rattled by sudden evacuation orders last February. Nearly 200,000 people were forced to flee when engineers feared that damaged spillways at Oroville Dam would unleash an uncontroll­ed wall of water that would inundate her town and others downstream. The crisis was averted.

The existence of small cracks in the replacemen­t spillway was revealed this week after the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission posted communicat­ions about them online. Officials downplayed concerns about them Thursday in a conference call with reporters, saying hairline cracks are normal and expected in reinforced concrete because it shrinks as it cures.

Dahlmeier said that could’ve been communicat­ed more effectivel­y before the letter went public.

“Many of us that have been up there have seen those hairline fractures and it’s no big deal because it was explained to us one at a time,” Dahlmeier told The Associated Press.

Many residents of Oroville don’t trust what they’re hearing from the Depart- ment of Water Resources, she said, and officials in the agency’s Sacramento headquarte­rs have failed to address the concerns of people living in the shadow of the nation’s tallest dam. Crews are nearly finished preparing the main spillway for the rainy winter season and will spend the coming months working on the adjacent emergency spillway.

State officials should put in the effort to visit Rotary Clubs and schools to meet people in small groups and answer their questions honestly, she said.

“I don’t want to hear it from Sacramento anymore,” Dahlmeier said. “I want to hear it wordsmithe­d from somebody that lives here and knows how to speak to my community and my people.”

Two community meetings are planned next week in Oroville and Yuba City. Erin Mellon, a spokeswoma­n for the department, said officials also have monthly calls with stakeholde­rs and elected officials and send emails to community members every time they issue a press release.

“There is only so much we can simplify and still provide detailed descriptio­ns and answers that are accurate,” Mellon said.

Jeff Petersen, project director for Kiewit Constructi­on, which has the contract to rebuild the spillways at an estimated cost of $500 million, said the cracks don’t affect the structural integrity of the spillway. Adjusting the concrete mixture could reduce the number of cracks, Petersen said, but experts need to be careful not to reduce the concrete’s strength.

Engineers believe the number of cracks is “in the hundreds,” with the biggest about the width of a human finger nail and the average about half that thickness, said Jeanne Cuttel, incident commander for the Department of Water Resources.

Federal regulators told state officials that they share the state’s conclusion that “the current condition of the hairline cracking does not warrant repair at this time.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Cranes sit by the Oroville Damspillwa­y Thursday. California water officials and the constructi­on manager said that recently found hairline cracks on the spillway are normal.
PHOTOS BY RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Cranes sit by the Oroville Damspillwa­y Thursday. California water officials and the constructi­on manager said that recently found hairline cracks on the spillway are normal.
 ??  ?? Many residents of Oroville don’t trust what they’re hearing from the Department of Water Resources, the mayor said, about the main spillway and the work being done on it.
Many residents of Oroville don’t trust what they’re hearing from the Department of Water Resources, the mayor said, about the main spillway and the work being done on it.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States