
Spurred by heavy state, national and international media attention on the Oroville Dam crisis, California Governor Jerry Brown on February 24 announced a series of immediate and longer-term actions to bolster dam safety, improve flood protection and fix the state’s aging transportation and water infrastructure.
Recent storms have pounded the state of California resulting in a dam spillway eroding, roads crumbling and levees failing, said Governor Brown. Our aging infrastructure is maxed-out. We can take some immediate actions – and we will – but going forward we’ll need billions more in investment.
In a press conference at the State Capitol Friday, Brown told reporters, There is real work to be done. We got to belly up to the bar and start spending money.
Brown’s plan will redirect $50 million from the General Fund and request a $387 million Proposition 1 appropriation from the Legislature as soon as possible, according to Brown’s Office.
In addition, the Brown administration plans to require emergency action plans and flood inundation maps for all dams; enhance California’s existing dam inspection program; and seek prompt regulatory action and increased funding from the federal government to improve dam safety.
On February 22, the Governor made a surprise visit to the Incident Command Post in Oroville and surveyed the regional flood control system, including areas recently impacted by flooding. This was the first time since the crisis began on February 7 that Brown visited Oroville.
Brown’s funding package does not include money to fix the Oroville Dam’s primary spillway or auxiliary spillway, where severe erosion has occurred.