Mass evacuation as rains strain tallest US dam
SAN FRANCISCO
The reservoir of the Oroville Dam, located 120 kilometers north of the state capital Sacramento, had been completely full after several weeks of heavy rain.
The 235-meter dam itself was not in danger of collapse, the California Department of Water Resources said, but there were major fears over the emergency spillway due to erosion damage on its concrete top after water began pouring over it on Feb. 11, Agence France-Presse reported.
Authorities were releasing 2,830 cubic meters of water per second from the main spillway, bringing down the level of reservoir Feb. 12 so that there was no more flow into the emergency channel, the Sacramento Bee newspaper cited Department of Water Resources spokesman Doug Carlson as saying.
Although the immediate threat had passed, the evacuation order remained in place as authorities evaluated the state of not just the auxiliary spillway but also the concrete-lined main spillway, which was damaged as well with a large gash caused by recent heavy volume.
“Now that there is no more water going over the emergency spillway, though it brings stability to the situation, there are still a lot of unknowns,” Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea told a news conference on the night of Feb. 12. “We’re not at the point yet where we can make decisions about whether or not it is safe to repopulate areas.”
About 188,000 people in downstream communities had been ordered to flee on the afternoon Feb. 12 as water was still gushing over the top of the wide auxiliary spillway.
In a Facebook post ordering the “immediate evacuation” of low-lying areas of the city of Oroville as well as downstream communities, the Butte County Sheriff’s department warned that a “hazardous situation is developing with the Oroville Dam auxiliary spillway.”
“Failure of the auxiliary spillway structure will result in an uncontrolled release of flood waters from Lake Oroville,” it said, adding three times that this was “NOT A Drill.”
To the south, Yuba County also ordered residents to move to safety.
“Yes, an evacuation has been ordered,” the Yuba County Office of Emergency Services said in a Facebook post.
“All Yuba County on the valley floor. The auxiliary spillway is close to failing... Take only routes to the east, south, or west. DO NOT TRAVEL NORTH TOWARD OROVILLE!!!!!”
Helicopter footage from news station KCRA showed water pouring down the auxiliary spillway, which is parallel to the main spillway.