Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Tech could enhance local levee monitoring “... what’s critical now is to maintain those investment­s to make sure they’re all working to our design standards and there are no issues. And if we do find issues while our maintenanc­e is ongoing, we can correct

- By Angela Guglielmin­o aguglielmi­no@appealdemo­crat.com

Yuba Water Agency’s Flood

Risk Reduction Manager Sami Nall said that while she is not an oracle, it is critically important that locals understand that no matter how much we invest in flood risk reduction, there will always be a risk of flooding.

“We live below a dam and we live along the river,” Nall said. “Yuba Water is committed to minimizing that risk to the smallest extent possible, but there will always be a risk.”

With the goal of further reducing the risk of catastroph­ic flooding, a project kickoff meeting was held on April 19 to better understand how the Center for Informatio­n Technology

Research in the Interest of Society and the Banatao Institute (CITRIS) could use research and technologi­es to enhance levee monitoring and management in

Yuba County. CITRIS leverages the research strengths of different University of California campuses.

The April 19 meeting also involved site tours of local levees, and it provided a chance for the researcher­s from CITRIS to meet levee managers.

Nall said CITRIS researcher­s were given a lot of informatio­n, so the next step is for the CITRIS researcher­s to look at that data and then return to Yuba Water and the reclamatio­n districts to identify proposed ideas for

Sami Nall

different sensors and locations.

While recommenda­tions are still being worked on, CITRIS researcher­s mentioned sensor possibilit­ies during the meeting. They considered drone flights using sensors to check on different temperatur­es in the ground to highlight potential wet areas that might indicate water being on the dry side of the levee where it should not be. They also looked at fiber optic cables that might be able to sense movement in the levees, for example.

“And we will work with our levee districts to make sure that the proposed technology and the proposed informatio­n they would get is actually useful,” Nall said.

A lot of money has already been invested into local levee infrastruc­ture.

“But what’s critical now is to maintain those investment­s to make sure they’re all working to our design standards and there are no issues. And if we do find issues while our maintenanc­e is ongoing, we can correct them before they result in catastroph­ic flooding,” Nall said. “These sensing technologi­es can look at different issues, such as sloughing or erosion of the levee or seepage – there might be water flowing underneath the levee that they can help sense.”

Nall said that she thinks that the more that can be done to protect levees now, the better.

Yuba Water will commit up to $360,000 over two years for the project, which will deploy advanced sensing technologi­es at eight different levee sites to investigat­e more efficient monitoring methods.

This project is part of a partnershi­p formed last year with a signed memorandum of understand­ing between Yuba Water, the city of Wheatland and CITRIS.

The general manager of Reclamatio­n District

784, Patrick Meagher, said that deploying additional sensing technologi­es will ensure a safer levee system because it will enable awareness of potential problems well before they evolve into major issues that would require more immediate action.

“It will enable RD 784 and other reclamatio­n districts to mitigate the problems before they evolve into something larger,” Meagher said.

 ?? Yuba Water Agency ?? A University of California Berkeley professor with CITRIS, Kenichi Soga, holds fiber optic cables at the beginning of a CITRIS levee site visit on April 19 in Olivehurst. Fiber optic cables could be used to improve levee monitoring.
Yuba Water Agency A University of California Berkeley professor with CITRIS, Kenichi Soga, holds fiber optic cables at the beginning of a CITRIS levee site visit on April 19 in Olivehurst. Fiber optic cables could be used to improve levee monitoring.
 ?? Yuba Water Agency ?? Yuba Water Agency’s Flood Risk Reduction Manager Sami Nall is pictured speaking during the CITRIS levee site tour on April 19 in Yuba County.
Yuba Water Agency Yuba Water Agency’s Flood Risk Reduction Manager Sami Nall is pictured speaking during the CITRIS levee site tour on April 19 in Yuba County.

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