Live streaming of the Oroville Dam is
suggesting the spillway has been compromised and a whole section of concrete
has been washed away.
A large breach can be seen in the concrete
slipway with a huge crack opening up further down
Residents are nervously watching the
Oroville Dam and have packed their bags prepared to evacuate again if
necessary.
Another area of concern is the Don Pedro
reservoir, which officials said was at 98 percent capacity on Sunday. The
reservoir captures water from the Tuolumne River.
In Stanislaus County, where the Don Pedro
Reservoir is forecast to reach capacity by Tuesday, authorities are warning
residents along the Tuolumne River 45 miles away in Modesto to consider
evacuating voluntarily until the flood danger is past.
Sacramento Bee.com claims the town of Maxwell
is flooded and two stretches of Interstate 5 north of Williams were barely
passable because of encroaching waters. Roads throughout the region were closed
from flooding and mudslides. Reclamation districts patrolled levees, monitoring
boils and sandbagging.
In Colusa County, the Sheriff’s Office
blamed local creeks and canals for the widespread flooding “due to the
overabundance of water the last 24 hours” and announced “voluntary evacuations
for those who felt their safety was at risk.”
Another Northern California reservoir is at
full capacity as a new "Weather Bomb" is pounding the area: Flooding
is inevitable as another 6 inches of rain expected.
Storms will resume their track across the
region following a brief break from heavy precipitation to start the weekend.
Precipitation will become more widespread
and heavy throughout Monday, with the heaviest rain expected to slam Northern
California.
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Geeze, what the heck are those people waiting for. Get the hell out of there. It's going to break apart. Don't think for a second that it won't. All that water pushing against it.
ReplyDeleteYES I TOTALLY AGREE! DOT LEAVE IT TOO THE LAST SECOND! SILLY IF THEY DO, IT WILL BREAK YOU CAN SEE IT WILL! GET OUT WHILE THERE IS TIME PEOPLES!
ReplyDeleteOroville dam is damned ( done for ).
ReplyDeleteThe spillway is not the dam. The spillway is damaged but the dam is OK. The most serious problem was the emergency spillway. That is no longer being used. IMHO the dam will hold unless a big earthquake happens near it.
ReplyDeleteHere's an image of why it's possible that the dam could actually collapse. http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-02-13/oroville-dam-drains-problem-remains-leaving-evacuees-limbo
ReplyDelete