A Silicon Valley reservoir must be drained because its dam could break during a major earthquake and flood numerous towns and cities in the San Francisco Bay area.
The risk posed by the dam on the Anderson River in Santa Clara County is too great, said the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), which said the lake has to be drained by Oct. 1.
Capka said the reservoir must be drained “as quickly as you can” and the dam must be fixed before the winter of 2021 and 2022. “Your actions to date do not demonstrate an appropriate sense of urgency,” he also wrote.
Local officials agreed that the dam needs to be retrofitted but she said that draining the reservoir could result in unintended consequences.
Camacho said draining the reservoir might cause fish die-offs and significantly impact sensitive native fish, amphibians, reptiles, wetlands, and other habitats. Water supplies would be strained, and the district would have to find another source outside the county especially if there’s another drought, she added.
More than 14,000 residents were evacuated in 2017 after the Coyote Creek, downstream of the Anderson Reservoir, flooded homes and shut down numerous roads. That was following especially heavy rains in the area.
Currently, Anderson Reservoir is operating below the current levels required by FERC and California’s dam agency, according to Valley Water. In the interim, officials will have to design and build a large outlet pipe to drain the water before Oct. 1.
“There are thousands of people in this country that are living downstream from dams that are probably considered deficient given current safety standards,” said Mark Ogden, a former Ohio dam safety official who is now a technical specialist with the Association of State Dam Safety Officials, according to AP.