Department of Water Resources
A daily compilation of significant news articles and comment
May 11, 2007
5. Agencies, Programs, People
Work wraps up on damaged East Palo Alto levees; Needed repairs cost $550,000 and took nearly 17 months -
LRC to St. Helena: Make changes or be sued; Environmental group ups ante in battle over Upvalley flood project - Napa Valley Register
Work wraps up on damaged
By Banks Albach, staff writer
The damaged creek levees that sparked flooding concerns nearly 17 months ago in
Originally slated to be finished before the 2006-07 rainy season, the repairs suffered several setbacks, including a lengthy bureaucratic process involving the city and the state.
"It's basically complete," said Rex Upp, owner of Upp Geotechnologies, the Campbell-based firm that designed the repair plans. "We just have some ongoing monitoring that's going to be done."
For the repairs, crews poured 8-foot-high concrete reinforcements; placed 400 feet of rip-rap, or boulders to prevent erosion; and buried about 3,000 feet of plastic mesh under sections of the levees that had developed cracks.
The levees protect the Gardens District of the city from San Francisquito Creek. In January 2006, a series of heavy rains and high creek volumes weakened the banks nearly to the point of collapse, prompting then Mayor Ruben Abrica to declare a state of emergency.
The city went to the state and secured $470,000 in reimbursable emergency grants, $170,000 of which the city received up front.
With the project totaling about $550,000, City Manager Alvin James said the next step is getting reimbursement from the state. He said final documents were sent to the state this week.
Vice Mayor Pat Foster said residents should feel less anxious once the rainy season approaches this year.
"It will have more meaning for the residents in that area come November," she said. "And with it having taken so long, I'll assume it was done very well." #
http://www.paloaltodailynews.com/article/2007-5-10-05-10-07-epa-levees
LRC to
By Jesse Duarte, staff writer
The Living Rivers Council will ask for an injunction to block construction of
LRC spokesman Sampson Bowers and
Instead of the 17
LRC’s Chris Malan said it’s “highly likely” that LRC would withdraw its lawsuit if the city adopts the plan.
City staff have been following the City Council’s June 2006 decision to proceed with the current plan, he said.
The main design difference between the proposed project and the city’s project, which is expected to break ground in June, is the levee running north of
Current plans call for the levee to extend to
Aside from eliminating flood protection for land owned by Dennis Hunter and saving the city property acquisition costs, moving back the levee would enlarge the flood plain, resulting in a more effective project, Bowers and Milliken said.
St. Helena City Manager Bert Johansson said the city wants to proceed without making new adjustments.
“The decision was made to leave the levee as it is, so I’d be extremely surprised if it would be changed this late in the game,” Johansson said.
Milliken called the city’s decision not to conduct a new environmental impact report for the 2006 plan “kind of a stretch,” but said the proposed project would not require a new EIR. “This is less intrusive, less expensive and a lot simpler,” he said.
Napa Superior Court Judge Raymond Guadagni ruled last October against LRC’s claim that the latest version of the project violates its 2005 settlement agreement with the city. LRC appealed the decision, but the case might not be decided on appeal until late this year. If LRC can show that its interests would be harmed by construction — and the injunction is granted — construction would be halted and the appeal could run its course. #
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