A public-private
task force of dam safety experts now estimates that $40 billion
is needed to repair and upgrade U.S. structures. That has
prompted its parent organization, the Association of State
Dam Safety Officials, to begin developing state-by-state cost
estimates and a national funding program.
The group held its annual
meeting in Providence, R.I., Sept. 28-30 and is moving on
several fronts to develop a national dam safety effort. A
basic problem owners face is finding money for repairs and
improvements, or simple maintenance.
Dams can fail in a number of ways,
primarily through seepage and piping and overtopping. "Very
often owners need to increase spillway capacity to pass floodwaters,
or the dam will overtop and could fail," says Eugene
P. Zeizel, engineer for the Federal Emergency Management Agency's
national dam safety program. "This is an expensive and
difficult operation, and along with seepage, is one of our
greatest concerns."
The association estimates 58%
of all dams are privately owned, and many of these are among
the 20 to 50 dams that fail annually. "We can't afford
not to do something," says Alton P. Davis Jr., a West
Ossipee, N.H., engineering consultant. "We are trying
to figure out what it would take to fix the problem."
To develop the $40-billion number,
the task force segmented the estimated 75,193 federally inventoried
dams into four height groups. They then determined percentages
for specific actions such as maintenance, detailed engineering
assessment, hazard potential reclassification and physical
improvements. Each action was assigned estimated costs. Dams
of 25 ft and higher needed about $31.5 billion worth of upgrades.
"For us to be successful
as regulators we must go beyond just identifying problem dams,"
says Raul F. Silva, task force chairman and Massachusetts
Dept. of Environmental Management chief engineer. "A
fund must be developed for a combination of loans and grants
to adequately address their problems." He says several
states, such as Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Utah, have existing
funding programs. "There are more rehabs in Pennsylvania
in one year than we have in five years in similar states without
a program," he says.
Dam safety officials also are
pushing programs to raise awareness of dam risks. One current
problem is that no one really knows how many dams exist in
the U.S. The 75,193 included in the Corp of Engineers' national
inventory is significantly less than the 94,000 generated
by a tally of state inventories. "And, you can probably
add another 10,000 to 15,000 that are not jurisdictional,"
says Davis. Massachusetts has 1,528 dams in the national inventory
but 2,921 under state regulation.
Dams less than 25 ft high with
less than 50 acre-ft of storage are often not regulated. "Smaller
dams become a greater concern following downstream development
and because they are inspected infrequently," says Silva.
"But in the intervening time they could go from low to
high hazard and the homeowners and inspectors would know nothing
about it." New Jersey last month ordered new inspections
of hundreds of its 1,592 listed dams, after a freak August
flood in two counties breached four and damaged 20.
Currently about 1,800 dams
are labeled "unsafe." Another 9,300 are labeled
"high-hazard"meaning a failure could result
in loss of life. "Without a national program we could
have a serious problem," says Zeizel.
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