Los Angeles Times

Official ousted over Oroville crisis

Gov. Brown replaces Water Resources chief after report blames agency’s lax safety culture for incident.

- By Ralph Vartabedia­n ralph.vartabedia­n@latimes.com Twitter: @rvartabedi­an

Grant Davis, director of the California Water Resources Department, was replaced Wednesday just days after an independen­t investigat­ion of the Oroville dam spillway incident last year found that a flawed safety culture contribute­d to the disaster.

The agency said Gov. Jerry Brown replaced Davis with Karla Nemeth, who has been deputy secretary and senior advisor for water policy at the California Natural Resources Agency since 2014. The announceme­nt was made by Natural Resources Secretary John Laird, who oversees the water department.

“This new team will help the state better prepare for ever-greater challenges to our infrastruc­ture and flood management systems, and ensure that California is doing everything possible to ensure dam and flood safety,” Laird said.

Davis took over the department only last summer, after the spillway incident in February. He came from the Sonoma County Water Agency, where he will return to serve as general manager, the department said.

An independen­t panel of experts said the department is insular, beset by complacenc­y and a flawed safety culture.

It failed to recognize for decades warning signs that the spillway had design and constructi­on defects, which ultimately caused it to break apart in February after the Feather River was swollen by rains, leading to the evacuation of 188,000 people living nearby.

Davis’ exit was part of a larger restructur­ing at the department, a likely response to both the spillway incident and some of the findings of investigat­ors who faulted its safety culture. Outside engineerin­g experts speculated that a houseclean­ing could occur at the department to help bring a rapid change to its culture.

The department created three deputy directorsh­ips, one specifical­ly focused on safety and flood management, led by Eric Koch, a Department of Water Resources veteran.

The department said that was consistent with the investigat­ors’ recommenda­tions.

The two others include a deputy for water management and environmen­tal issues and one for sustainabl­e ground water management, a job that went to an existing department deputy director since 2014.

In a news release by the Sonoma County Water Agency, Davis praised Brown.

“This is going to be a very important year in California for water,” Davis said. “I am confident that the governor and the state are on a solid pathway forward.”

‘This new team will ... ensure that California is doing everything possible to ensure dam and flood safety.’ — John Laird, Natural Resources secretary

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