State will pay to raise levee protecting Corcoran city, prison from flooding
Central Valley Californians threatened by this year’s massive Sierra snowmelt will receive much-needed state funding as they rush to raise the Corcoran levee, a critical piece of flood control infrastructure that protects the city of Corcoran and its sprawling prison complex from the rising waters of Tulare Lake.
Local and county officials have for weeks been pleading with the state to help finance the project — a substantial feat of engineering that will involve raising the 14.5mile earthen embankment about 4 feet to keep floodwaters at bay. The levee is key to protecting critical infrastructure in the area, including medical facilities, power plants and dual prison facilities that hold about 8,000 inmates.
Gov. Gavin Newsom announced the funding Thursday, saying the state will shoulder the $17 million needed to raise the levee from 188 above sea level to 192 feet, the historical level needed to protect the community from flooding.
The governor also announced an additional $290 million for flood response and preparation projects.
“California is facing unprecedented weather whiplash — we just experienced the driest three years on record, and now we’re dealing with historic flooding,” Newsom said in a statement. “Our investments must match this reality of climate-driven extremes.”
The announcement followed appeals by Corcoran and Kings County officials for help in raising the aging levee. City Manager Greg Gatzka told The Times last month that he was “beyond frustrated” by the difficulty of accessing emergency funding for the repair.
“This is a huge relief,” Gatzka said Thursday. “Knowing that we can fully fund this Corcoran levee reinforcement so that we can protect the whole entire community and two state prisons, from not only the existing flooding that’s already out there — which is about 360,000 acre-feet of water — but the oncoming water that we know is coming from this massive snowmelt.”
The funds will come from the California Disaster Assistance Act and are contingent upon the county completing an update to its hazard mitigation plan, which may enable some costs to be recouped through the Federal Emergency Management Agency,
Newsom’s office said.
Also announced Thursday was a revision to the state’s proposed budget that will include an additional $290 million for flood response and preparation projects in the state. The $290 million would come on top of $202 million in flood investments proposed in January. The May budget revision is expected to be released Friday.
Among the investments are $125 million for response and recovery from this year’s damaging storms, which will be reallocated from funds originally planned for drought contingency projects, state finance officials said.
Other items include $75 million toward local flood control efforts, including a flood risk management project on the Pajaro River, which experienced its levee breaches and flooding during the storms. The proposed budget also includes $40 million for San Joaquin Floodplain restoration; $25 million to expand current direct assistance programs for agriculture-related businesses that have been affected by recent storms; and $25 million for potential additional disaster relief and response costs to address immediate impacts.
Perhaps nowhere is the work more urgent than in Corcoran, where this year’s wet winter refilled the dry Tulare Lake for the first time in 25 years. Residents there have spent the last several weeks eyeing the snowcapped Sierras with anxiety, with many fearing that the levee is too low to hold back the millions of gallons of runoff that are expected to flow into the basin as its melts.
Indeed, nearly all of the mountains’ record-deep snowpack has yet to melt, with southern Sierra snowpack at 436% of normal for the date as of Thursday, according to state data. The snow water equivalent, or amount of water contained in the snowpack, is 49.9 inches.
Gatzka said the Cross Creek Flood Control District, which is responsible for the levee, has completed about 60% of the repair work and that the state funds will help get the project the rest of the way.