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IT AIN'T OVER YET: California's crumbling Oroville Dam will be hit by a FOOT of rain as engineers race to repair erosion after years of 'patch and pray' quick-fixes

Jennifer Smith

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FW:  2/15/17

  •  The first storms are happening now and will last until Sunday, bringing five inches of rain and 33mph winds 
  • On Monday and Tuesday, up to a foot of rain is forecast and even stronger winds could thwart the repairs
  • Crews have been filling cracks in Oroville Dam main spillway with concrete and hoping it will hold for years
  • They reported it as safe in several reports since 2009 before the dam threatened catastrophe last week
  • The enormous hole in the main chute compromised the dam's drainage function as water in its reservoir rose
  • It forced engineers to turn to a never-before-used emergency spillway which buckled under the pressure 
  • The total cost of the damage, which engineers are now frantically fixing, is estimated to be $100million
  • Residents who had been evacuated were allowed home on Tuesday but must be ready to flee again

The Oroville Dam is to be soaked by a foot of rain by Tuesday, ramping up the pressure on engineers who are frantically trying to repair 'patch and pray' quick-fixes which led to its near-collapse last week.

Up to five inches of rain will land on the Northern California dam this weekend in the first storm which will also bring winds of up to 33mph.

Another 10-12 inches will land at the start of next week and bring even stronger winds which may thwart repair works. 

Meteorologists said it is that storm which will be a concern to engineers using helicopters to try to secure the dam's emergency spillway which nearly gave way last week to the dam's full reservoir. 

200,000 people were suddenly evacuated on Sunday when the California Department of Water Resources dramatically announced that an emergency spillway at the dam was an hour away from collapse.  

Residents nervously returned home as the evacuation order was downgraded to a warning on Tuesday but they have been told to be ready to flee again at a moment's notice if the volatile situation turns on its head again. 

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The enormous scale of the damage - and the required work to fix it - at California's Oroville Dam became plain this week as 125 emergency crews worked round the clock to patch up its eroded spillways 

The enormous scale of the damage - and the required work to fix it - at California's Oroville Dam became plain this week as 125 emergency crews worked round the clock to patch up its eroded spillways 

 

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4226368/Cracks-offer-clues-California-dams-troubles.html#ixzz4Yy30uURB

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