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Mass evacuation as rains strain tallest US dam

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AFP Oroville
Almost 200,000 people were under evacuation orders in northern California today after a threat of catastrophic failure at the United States' tallest dam.

Officials said the threat had subsided for the moment as water levels at the Oroville Dam, 75 miles (120 kilometers) north of San Francisco, have eased. But people were still being told to stay out of the area.

Several weeks of heavy rains had filled the 770-foot (235-meter) high dam to capacity.

The threat comes not from the dam itself, which the California Department of Water Resources said was not in danger of collapse, but from an emergency spillway that channels off excess water.
 

A giant hole opened up in the dam's main spillway last week, forcing authorities to activate the emergency spillway on Saturday for the first time ever.

But it began eroding, threatening a rupture that would have sent water surging towards cities in the valley below, US media reported.

Authorities then released 100,000 cubic feet (2,830 cubic meters) of water per second from the main spillway, bringing down the level of reservoir Sunday, the Sacramento Bee newspaper said, citing Department of Water Resources spokesman Doug Carlson.

Although the most pressing threat had passed, the evacuation order remained in place as authorities evaluated the state of the two spillways.

Helicopters readied overnight to drop rocks into eroded areas in the emergency spillway, according to local media, ahead of rain that is forecast for Wednesday and Thursday that could fill the reservoir again.

The California National Guard said Monday morning on Facebook that it had alerted its 23,000 members to be ready to deploy.

"Now that there is no more water going over the emergency spillway, though it brings stability to the situation, there are still a lot of unknowns," Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea told a news conference Sunday night.

"We're not at the point yet where we can make decisions about whether or not it is safe to repopulate areas.

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First Published: Feb 13 2017 | 11:57 PM IST

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