Dayton Daily News

Some fret over replacing dam

Keeping water low could hurt tourism at Buckeye Lake.

- By Kantele Franko JAY LAPRETE PHOTOS / ASSOCIATED PRESS

— J-me BUCKEYE LAKE Braig smiles fondly as she talks about the six generation­s of her family who have loved Buckeye Lake. She’s in good spirits, considerin­g a recent report warned that the 4.1-mile earthen dam into which her home is built could fail catastroph­ically and flood neighborho­ods behind it, threatenin­g 3,000 people.

Braig chuckles when she mentions that when she sleeps in the lower level of her house, the dam is just on the other side of the wall. “I’ve never worried about it up till now,” she says, noting she’s concerned, not fearful.

About 370 homes are built into the roughly 180year-old central Ohio dam, which is mostly edged by a masonry wall and vertical metal plates that catch the waves in the recreation­al reservoir. In the few steps from Braig’s porch to the grassy embankment’s edge, she crosses the invisible line between private and public land, a blurred division brought into focus by a recent U.S. Army Corps of Engineers report.

It traced the dam’s unusual problems to 1895, when the state sold parts of the embankment for private use. Over time, bits and chunks were carved away for the long row of buildings tucked tightly into the slope. People dug foundation­s for cottages and homes, ran utility lines and appropriat­ed the state land next to their docks, sprucing up the waterside with flagpoles, flower beds and patios.

The Corps concluded the developmen­t created defects in the embankment, increasing the risk of dam failure. Other officials outlined a worst-case scenario: Something — a gas explosion at a home, perhaps — causes a break and sends an 8-foot wave of water and mud crashing into the community behind the embankment.

Emergency management officials plan exercises just in case, and others are taking precaution­s. A preschool near the lake closed, and a campground owner says he’s thinking about how to evacuate campers if something goes wrong.

Everyone wants to avoid a disaster. But each time concerns about potential deteriorat­ion were raised previously, residents pushed back or government leadership switched and little changed, Braig said.

This time, state officials committed to building a new dam between the existing one and the water at an estimated cost of up to $150 million. As design work begins, officials also decided to keep the water level low in the relatively shallow lake.

For locals who depend on the lake, the Corps’ assessment has led to more questions than answers. Will lower water deter boaters and tourists? How will businesses be affected? Will the fish die or appalling algae thrive? What about Cranberry Bog, the restricted-access nature preserve with a unique ecological history? Will local property values tumble? Will the dam hold in the meantime?

And where, exactly, is that line between private interests and the state’s turf?

Some locals wonder whether officials could leave more water in the lake to keep watercraft and business afloat for visitors — like the thousands of people who pack in for Fourth of July fireworks.

Buckeye Lake Winery owner Tracy Higginboth­am calls the state’s fix overdue but worries about the impact. Day trippers and weekenders might head elsewhere, he said, and residents won’t patronize waterfront businesses like his as frequently if it requires a drive around the lake instead of a jaunt across the water.

Economical­ly, he said, “it’s going to be painful.”

Braig, who runs the Greater Buckeye Lake Historical Society, predicts pontoons, canoes and kayaks still will be used this summer, and she is confident the society’s tour boat will be out, too, though it may carry only half the usual 40 passengers.

Acknowledg­ing she might be in the minority, she views the lake as she views its future: “It’s not half empty. It’s half full.”

A half-mile down the dam, 62-year-old Vic Silva is less optimistic. He wants to sell his place and retire but figures that won’t happen until a new dam is finished. Meanwhile, his boat might be stuck at a marina, and his dock, crippled by ice over the winter, has tipped into the water.

Should he rebuild it? He spots the Buckeye Lake State Park manager doing a daily dam inspection and asks what to do.

Nothing, manager Jason Wesley tells him, at least not until there’s more public informatio­n about what’s next.

 ??  ?? J-me Braig, director of the Greater Buckeye Lake Historical Society, stands on a dock in front of her home on the dam at Buckeye Lake on Monday. The lake’s earthen dam is deteriorat­ing, which perhaps isn’t surprising for a 180-year-old structure.
J-me Braig, director of the Greater Buckeye Lake Historical Society, stands on a dock in front of her home on the dam at Buckeye Lake on Monday. The lake’s earthen dam is deteriorat­ing, which perhaps isn’t surprising for a 180-year-old structure.
 ??  ?? Settling steps show signs of deteriorat­ion near the dam. When a report warned the dam could fail, the state decided to replace it.
Settling steps show signs of deteriorat­ion near the dam. When a report warned the dam could fail, the state decided to replace it.

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