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posted by cmn32480 on Monday February 13 2017, @05:21AM   Printer-friendly
from the big-dam-problem dept.

130,000 California Residents Ordered to Evacuate Below Endangered Dam Spillway

Roads leading out of Oroville, Calif., were jammed with traffic Sunday evening as more than 130,000 people were ordered to evacuate the area due to the possibility of failure of the alternate spillway at Oroville Dam, authorities said.

Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea said during a news conference Sunday night that he had no choice but to order the evacuation.

"I didn't have the luxury of waiting to see if all was OK. We need to get people moving quickly and to save lives in case the worst case came to fruition," Honea said.

"This is a very dynamic situation. This is a situation that could change very, very rapidly," he said.

Gaping Hole in Spillway for Tallest U.S. Dam Keeps Growing

A gaping hole in the spillway for the tallest dam in the United States has grown and California authorities said they expect it will continue eroding as water washes over it but the Oroville Dam and the public are safe. Earlier this week, chunks of concrete flew off the nearly mile-long spillway, creating a 200-foot-long, 30-foot-deep hole. Engineers don't know what caused cave-in that is expected to keep growing until it reaches bedrock. But faced with little choice, the state Department of Water Resources resumed ramping up the outflow from Lake Oroville over the damaged spillway to keep up with all the runoff from torrential rainfall in the Sierra Nevada foothills.

Officials said the critical flood-control structure is at 90 percent of its capacity. But the dam is still safe and so are Oroville's 16,000 residents. "The integrity of the dam is not jeopardized in any way because the problem is with the spillway and not the dam," department spokesman Eric See said.

Located about 150 miles northeast of San Francisco, Oroville Lake is one of the largest man-made lakes in California and 770-foot-tall Oroville Dam is the nation's tallest.

Source:

http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/infrastructure/a25170/gaping-hole-in-spillway-for-tallest-us-dam-keeps-growing/

Oroville dam in California fails, mandatory evacuation of all residents ordered.

The Sacramento Bee reports that the emergency spillway of Oroville dam on lake Oroville in CA is in danger of imminent collapse. Lake Oroville is the largest drinking water reservoir in the US.

http://www.sacbee.com/news/state/california/water-and-drought/article132332499.html


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday February 13 2017, @02:52PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday February 13 2017, @02:52PM (#466606)

    I would have expected this out of China or India or somewhere. Isn't that how it's supposed to go? Chinese can't build anything! America: the has-been country that can't build and maintain anything anymore.

    But go ahead and build that wall. Show the world that you can do what China did centuries ago! Who needs this modern crap like water management?

  • (Score: 2) by Grishnakh on Monday February 13 2017, @05:35PM

    by Grishnakh (2831) on Monday February 13 2017, @05:35PM (#466673)

    We can build stuff just fine in America. The problem is the cost: it costs a lot of money to build stuff right, so we need to cut corners a lot to get it built at all. Remember, we have a lot of cronies and politicians who need to get paid off in order to build anything at all, and all that graft adds up. Since we're perfectly happy to keep re-electing these people, we just need to accept that building things right is too expensive for us, and we need to be happy with shoddy corner-cutting construction on major infrastructure projects.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 14 2017, @02:16AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 14 2017, @02:16AM (#466816)

      http://www.infrastructurereportcard.org/ [infrastructurereportcard.org]