The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Flooding puts stress on dams in N. Carolina

- By Sarah Rankin

Devastatin­g flooding in North Carolina in the aftermath of Hurricane Florence has raised concerns about whether dams across the state, some of them already in poor condition, will be able to hold up under the strain.

State and local officials have been monitoring dam safety and say there have been at least two breaches so far that caused no major issues. But there have been several other locations of concern and false alarms about dam failures that have caused panic.

According to data submitted to the National Inventory of Dams for this year’s deadline and obtained by The Associated Press, the state has 1,445 dams rated high hazard out of about 5,700 dams total, ranging from large federally owned ones to small private ones. That hazard classifica­tion does not indicate the likelihood of failure — just that any failure would be likely to cause the loss of one or more human lives.

Of those high-hazard dams, 185 had conditions of poor or unsatisfac­tory during recent inspection­s, the data show. And many of those dams were in areas that have been inundated with water.

Ahead of the storm, workers with North Carolina’s Dam Safety Program identified vulnerable structures, contacted dam owners and operators to call attention to the threat and asked them to consider lowering impoundmen­t water levels to temporaril­y increase storage capacity prior, Bridget Munger, a spokeswoma­n for the state Department of Environmen­tal Quality said.

Dam safety personnel have also been deployed to the state Emergency Operations Center since before the storm, Munger added.

State Emergency Management Director Mike Sprayberry said Monday that there had been one dam breach in Brunswick County. He said no homes were affected in the inundation area.

A failure at an unregulate­d dam in Anson County prompted the evacuation of about 12 homes Monday night but the water receded and the evacuees have since been allowed to return, emergency manager Rodney Diggs said Tuesday.

On Sunday night, an Associated Press reporter was with a U.S. Army swift-water rescue team in Fayettevil­le when a call came over the radio about a dam failure in Pinehurst, which turned out to be a false alarm. Then another call came in reporting another dam breach.

Soldiers who had been resting on cots starting donning boots, helmets and life vests, and a team deployed toward a nearby fire department. About halfway there, the call was canceled — another false alarm.

A Facebook post claiming a dam in Hope Mills, a suburb of Fayettevil­le, had failed caused trouble there Sunday night, Mayor Jackie Warner said.

“It created a panic because people thought the dam had broken, and they didn’t know which way the water would go,” she said. Residents started calling asking if they needed to leave their homes, she said.

The dam held up just fine.

Two of North Carolina’s high-hazard dams are at Duke Energy’s Weatherspo­on Plant in Robeson County, an area that has been swamped with water. One is at a cooling pond and the other at a coal ash pond. The dam at the coal ash pond was found to be in poor condition during an inspection last year, according to the data.

Both were performing well and no problems were expected, Duke spokeswoma­n Paige Sheehan said Monday.

Catastroph­ic dam failures are infrequent, and age is a leading indicator of dam failure, with the exception of seismic or weather events, a 2008 Congressio­nal Research Service report found.

The American Society of Civil Engineers gave a “D” grade to the state of the country’s dams in a 2017 report, noting the average age of the dams is 56 years old. The ASCE estimated there are more than 2,000 “deficient high-hazard” dams lacking investment in repairs and upgrades.

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 ?? GERALD HERBERT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A resident stands on her pier looking out onto the rising Waccamaw River in Conway, S.C., Monday. Residents are evacuating as the river is expected to flood in the coming days due heavy rains from Hurricane Florence.
GERALD HERBERT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A resident stands on her pier looking out onto the rising Waccamaw River in Conway, S.C., Monday. Residents are evacuating as the river is expected to flood in the coming days due heavy rains from Hurricane Florence.

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