State of the Union Address by President Donald J. Trump February 5th, 2019
Share

Army Corps reveals new Hanson Dam repair plans to protect Green River

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has decided to install additional
drains as well as extend an existing drainage tunnel to repair the
Howard Hanson Dam rather than extending a temporary grout curtain.

The corps revealed the new plans at a press conference
Friday in Seattle organized by U.S. Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., to
announce how the corps would spend the $44 million approved for repairs
as part of a $59 billion emergency supplemental spending bill approved
earlier this month by Congress and signed July 29 by President Obama.

Crews expect to start work this fall to install new drains
to help stop a leak through a damaged abutment next to Hanson Dam. The
dam helps protect the cities of Kent, Auburn, Renton and Tukwila from
Green River flooding. Construction is expected to take about one year.
That means one more winter

for residents and businesses under temporary dam repairs completed last year and the giant sandbags that line the river banks.

“We’ve been working steadily trying to determine the best
method to restore Howard Hanson Dam back to its design capacity,” said
Col. Anthony Wright, commander of the Seattle district of the Army
Corps. “We believe we have the best solution based around a series of
drains that controls the water inside the embankment and the abutment of
the reservoir.”

Wright said the ability to control water through drains
and tunnels will keep the embankment from internal erosion and the
potential collapse of the dam.

“After completion of these drains, I believe I can operate the dam at its full design capacity,” Wright said.

The odds of flooding in the Green River Valley are a 1 in
140 chance when the dam operates at full capacity. The risk of flooding
this winter sat at a 1 in 33 chance because the leak in the abutment
reduced the storage capacity behind the dam.

The abutment next to the dam was formed nearly 10,000
years ago by a landslide. The federal government built the rock-and
earth-fill Hanson dam in 1961 next to the abutment to control major
flooding in the Green River Valley. The dam is about 25 miles east of
Kent.

Problems with water storage behind the dam were discovered
by the corps when a 10-foot-wide depression formed on the embankment
next to the dam after heavy rain in January 2009. The corps stored a
record amount of water in the reservoir during that storm to prevent
flooding.

Wright expects the drains and tunnel to work well.

“We believe that this is a longer duration fix than the
grout curtain that has been discussed in the past,” Wright said of plans
revealed by the corps in March to extend a grout curtain by 650 feet.
“Grout curtains are subject to wear as water goes up and down against
them. The current grout curtain is performing well, but it has a (short)
lifespan. We want to go with something that has a longer duration.”

The corps spent $8.9 million to install a temporary grout
curtain last fall that increased the storage capacity in the reservoir
behind the dam.

It is possible the newly revealed fix of drains and an
extended tunnel might even serve as the long-term fix for the dam rather
than the construction of a concrete cutoff curtain that was expected to
cost as much as $500 million.

“We have an ongoing dam safety modification study to
determine how the corps approaches a longer term fix,” Wright said.
“This fix has a considerable duration and we’re considering it as one of
the alternatives. With that study not yet approved, I can’t say this is
the final answer but it is going to accomplish the mission we need to
do to reduce the risk downstream.”

Wright said water will drain into a tunnel before it is slowly released into the river a small amount at a time.

“We can try to stop (water) or control it and this is a method to control it,” Wright said.

Engineers decided a concrete cutoff wall might not work at Hanson Dam.

“A concrete cutoff wall is technically challenged in this
material this deep,” said Wright, who added its unlikely a concrete
cutoff would be built as the permanent fix. “The drains are in the
running as the top fix.”

With that fix a year away, residents and businesses will face a flooding risk this winter similar to last year.

“We were fortunate to have a fairly dry season last year,”
said King County Executive Dow Constantine at the press conference. “We
expect a wetter season this year. Our message will be to get ready and
stay ready.”

Constantine, Kent Mayor Suzette Cooke, Renton Mayor Denis
Law and Auburn Mayor Pete Lewis attended a briefing about the dam by
Wright before the press conference and then thanked Murray for her
efforts in helping to get the $44 million for the repairs.

“You have to view this as an incredible win at the federal level,” Constantine said.

Lewis praised the efforts of the mayors and county
officials to work with the state’s federal delegation to get money for
the dam to protect the Green River Valley.

“We still have a season to go,” Lewis said. “We still have
to be vigilant. But what we’ve heard today about the short period of
time before the corps begins new work, we can look forward to a brighter
future for us all and remembering that it is not just the four cities
by the Green River but the entire region economically that could have
been affected.”

Dave Komendat, chief security officer at Boeing, was
invited to the press conference to talk about how the dam repairs will
help the company’s facilities in Kent, Renton and Tukwila. Boeing
constructed 8-foot berms around a Renton facility as well as the Kent
building that houses its national defense programs.

“We put a lot of time and effort last year into mitigation
plans and processes to make sure we would not be adversely impacted,”
Komendat said. “Sen. Murray’s work to help fix the dam ensures that
Boeing and hundreds of other businesses and thousands of families in the
Green River Valley will be protected in the future.”

– The Kent Reporter

en_USEnglish