Dam

Idaho dam debate goes digital

LEWISTON, Idaho -- Some predicted that salmon and steelhead runs would be wiped out, bountiful big-game herds would crash and a beautiful canyon would be turned into a mud-lined reservoir.

Others said a gorgeous lake would be born, downstream floods would be a thing of the past and a recreational playground would bring economic stability to a rural outpost.

In the end the pro-dam forces won the argument. But when the millions of yards of concrete dried and the North Fork Clearwater River backed up behind a new dam at Bruces Eddy, neither side could claim to have been 100 percent accurate in their forecasts.

Glen Canyon Dam

Feds offer proposals for Glen Canyon Dam operation

PAGE, Ariz. — Federal officials say they’ve come up with some proposals on how to manage the flow of water at Glen Canyon Dam.

Standard-Examiner file photo
The Centerville Canyon Debris Dam is pictured in June.

Thanks to debris dam, Centerville homeowners to save on flood insurance

CENTERVILLE -- A new dam is expected to have a major impact on 181 homes formerly within a 100-year flood plain.

This week, officials sent a letter to those affected residents informing them they are no longer in a flood plain. City Manager Steve Thacker explained that the city has had the flood plain map amended by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, and it was made official Aug. 23.

Late-night boaters by Echo Dam spur investigation

COALVILLE -- Federal authorities are investigating reports of suspicious activity by a group of late-night boaters near a northern Utah dam.

Scientists say removing Klamath River dams may not help salmon

A $1.4 billion project to remove four hydroelectric dams and restore habitat to return Chinook salmon to the upper reaches of the Klamath River amounts to an experiment with no guarantee of success, an independent science review has concluded.

(NICHOLAS DRANEY/Standard-Examiner) 
The Centerville Canyon debris basin on Friday.

Debris basin will safeguard homes

CENTERVILLE -- The $2.25 million Centerville Canyon debris basin will allow 181 nearby homes to be removed from FEMA's "teardrop-shaped hazard zone," saving the homeowners some insurance money.

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