Deep. 200 feet wide. That issue prompted water managers to stop using the main spillway. That meant water in the that meant water in the lake. Swollen from all this winters storms. Started coming over the emergency spillway. The emergency spillway is just dirt and rocks. And with all the pressure from the water level so high. The concern. Especially yesterday. Was that the dirt and rock could collapse. And that would mean a 30 foot wall of water would come charging down this dirt hill. Some into the feather river. But tons and tons would keep coming downstream. Flooding towns as far south as marysville. 30 miles south of the lake. We are also now learning. That environmentalists raised concerns ayears ago about the stability of the emergency spillway at the oroville dam. But state officials insisted. The structure was safe. This is what the emergency spillway looks like today. Water is no longer spilling over but you can see the damage it left behind from this weekends spillover. Back
Nice weekend for easter theres some pleasant news right now to check the jr be and ill be interested to know with hearing from ashley if theyre going to be any Wind Restrictions or any other issues here at regularly have the nail right on the head thats what im watching right now is wind advisories issued by the dot so i do want to take a look at the jr be right now because it is under one of those high wind advisories and if the camera doesnt prove it i dont know what will you can see it shifting back and forth here. Theres a northbound traffic and southbound thats not really the issue again the focus will be taking your time as you cross a jr be keeping your hands on the Steering Wheel and is being cautious of other folks around you and i will let you now if and when the high wind advisory is lifted at the jr be for now we head back to the Traffic Network maps also a high wind advisory at the coleman bridge so the same story applies here if your head between yorktown and Gloucester P
THE GORGE — After 20 years of population decline, monitoring efforts are intensifying for a tiny, early-blooming endangered buttercup that grows only in the Gorge.
Columbia Hills Retirement Center has risen from the ashes, welcoming back residents of the facility with a ceremony just over 18 months after a deadly fire claimed the life of