Posted on 02/21/2019 7:22:52 AM PST by Oldeconomybuyer
PICO RIVERA, Calif. -- The Whittier Narrows Dam stands like a guardian between the San Gabriel Mountains and the towns downstream from them.
Its job is to make sure storms don't become floods. But recent government studies said the dam may not be strong enough.
"That's frightening. I had no idea. That's terrible," resident Mary Louise Garcia said.
Garcia has reason to be concerned. She's lived directly beneath the dam for the last 60 years.
According to the U.S. Geological Survey, the odds of a megastorm that could wipe out the Whittier Narrows Dam, as well as the Santa Fe Dam, are increasing as a result of global warming.
A so-called ARKstorm, the report said, could be more devastating than a major earthquake and cause roughly $725 billion in damage.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is still in the approval stage of a dam modification, hoping to strengthen the 62-year-old dam and make sure it would be able to handle a massive storm.
"That worries me very much. I never even though that we wouldn't have that dam. I thought it was there for life," Garcia said.
(Excerpt) Read more at abc7news.com ...
I’ve lived it California for more than four decades. We should to call this El Nino and La Nina. Now it’s this made up crap that’s to blame?
Good thing they cancelled the train!
Just what Califphony needs to cover their budget shortfall
Classic slow news day response; find something...anything that might happen in the next million years, write a story about it and try to create a sense of panic...all to sell a few papers.
In the 20 years I lived in CA, this is how they drag $$$ out of the Federal Gov.
They complain until someone throws $ at them and then they move on to the next complaint.
The dam has been there for probably 80 years.
She didn’t know it was there when she moved there?
I thought global warming was causing an extreme drought in Cali that would cause us all to die of thirst?
PROVE IT!
Dam. Damn!
You’d think that after Katrina, governments would pay attention to the viability of their dams.
But, nooooo.... waste money, wait for disaster, blame it on climate change, and tap the Federal Government (i.e., every other taxpayer) for repairs.
I shudder to think of the day when CO2 concentration spikes from 0.04% of the atmosphere to 0.045%
Good thing they cancelled the train!
Yes because the democrats need to try and shift the blame for their malfeasance in maintaining the states infrastructure and forests. For the theft of hundreds of millions if not billions of dollars supposedly for Moonbeams boondoggle the high speed train to nowhere anyone wants to go from nowhere anyone wants to be instead of reservoirs and desalination plants to deal with California's droughts.
They’re just tacking Global Warming onto the story, the way the always do.
In September 2017, the United States Army Corps of Engineers officials warned local residents that the dam no longer met the agencys ‘tolerable-risk’ guidelines and could fail in the event of a very large, very rare storm, similar to exceptionally intense California storms which occurred between December 1861 and January 1862, a so-called ARkStorm.
BTW, that dam is a mile from where I was born.
The worry warts should be encouraged that the Whittier Narrows Dam survived the Whittier Narrows earthquake on October 1, 1987. The epicenter was not far from the dam itself.
I felt that earthquake in Santa Barbara.
Good thing it won’t affect bullet train construction. :/
During the winter global warming apparently produces a series of cold rain and snow storms. The only time we have drought is when the stare district needs to raise charges.
If we had a real drought, Jerry brown would have done the sensible thing (sarcasm) and built a few desal plants as did the city of Carlsbad, instead of the not-so-hi-speed rail to nowhere,..
WATER districts
Before the Santa Ana was confined between modern cement banks, floods took place from Seal Beach to Irvine.
Also before those banks, the silt runoff formed the Balboa Peninsula.
“Before the Santa Ana was confined between modern cement banks, floods took place from Seal Beach to Irvine.”
The Los Angeles River used to do the same thing. In 1938 my mother’s family farm in Compton was heavily flooded.
Isn’t it hilarious?
The storms of 1982 were way worse. This is an ordinary above average year — and they run around screaming “climate change! Aaaaah! We’re all gonna die!”
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