Big bill for small ponds: Ecology notifies property owners of unsafe dams

EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the first of a two-part series on the designation of six water impoundment areas as illegal, hazardous dams.

Six North Olympic Peninsula property owners — including forest-product companies in Port Angeles and Port Townsend — have been told they have illegal, unpermitted, mostly earthen dams on their property that could endanger human life should they fail.

The state Dam Safety Office, a branch of the Department of Ecology, mailed notices to 141 property owners across Washington state saying their dams are not on the state’s list of permitted dams.

Safety Office officials said a dam is not simply a wall that holds back a body of water.

The state defines a dam as any impoundment of more than 10 acre-feet of water, or 3.25 million gallons — including ponds and sewage lagoons — which, if it failed, would flood at least one home.

Property owners were told in the notices that the Safety Office must interview them for about two hours and also inspect their dams.

That first inspection costs the property owner nothing.

But if structural integrity is lacking and the dam must be upgraded, the owners must pay the agency $1,400 to approve a dam modification plan and annual inspection fees of at least $300.

Repairs could cost a minimum of $10,000 and range to tens of thousands of dollars for extensive repairs, Dam Safety Office Supervisor Doug Johnson said.

Those repairs could range from building buttresses and spillways to draining out the water.

The Dam Safety Office will provide technical assistance and advice, but no agency funding is available to property owners.

Current property owners are responsible for repairs even if they didn’t build the dam.

“They are kind of stuck with this white elephant, and stuck with fixing them up or making or breaching them so they can’t pose a risk,” Johnson said.

In their notices, the property owners were told: “We anticipate that many dams will need at least some structural modifications to resolve a threat to their integrity or to provide adequate spillway capacity.”

Two categories

Property owners received notices for two kinds of dams: high-hazard and significant-hazard dams:

• A significant-hazard dam could flood one or two homes if it failed, causing significant property damage.

• A high-hazard dam could flood three or more homes if it failed, causing significant property damage and loss of life.

The state pinpointed four high-hazard dams in Clallam County and two significant-hazard dams in Jefferson County.

Clallam County’s high-hazard dams are owned by Interfor Pacific Inc. forest products company on U.S. Highway 101, west of Port Angeles; Andrew Shogren on Deer Park Road, south of Bear Meadow Road; Dale and Carol Lohrer on Melton Road, west of Port Angeles; and Douglas Short near Jimmycomelately Creek, east of Sequim.

The two significant-hazard dams in Jefferson County are owned by Russell Lowry in Chimacum and Port Townsend Paper Co.

Those with high- or significant-hazard dams also will pay an annual inspection fee for non-annual inspections for as long as they own the properties.

If the dams are high-hazard, the property owner must pay $814 a year for Ecology to inspect the dam every five years.

If the dams are significant hazard, the property owner must pay $297 a year for Ecology inspections every 10 years.

“We pro-rate it so they don’t get hit with a big bill all at once,” Johnson said.

What’s a dam?

The definition of a dam was broadened in the ’70s and early ’80s while the Army Corps of Engineers inspected dams nationwide as part of the National Dam Safety Program, Johnson said.

“At that time, the definition was expanded to include not just traditional dams but waste ponds or any type of impoundment that holds a liquid,” he said.

“We started looking at any impoundment as being created by a dam.”

But the agency issued permits only for new ponds, sewage lagoons, dams and other impoundment areas, not existing ones.

“We didn’t look for existing stuff,” Johnson said.

“There were lots of waste ponds but no effort to bring them into compliance,” Johnson said. “The current effort we are looking at predates 1980.”

An Ecology intern discovered the abundance of unpermitted dams while she was doing an inventory of bodies of water more than 2 acres in the state’s agricultural areas.

Using aerial photos, the department identified existing dams with houses downstream.

“But there were a lot of other apparent dams that we knew didn’t have a permit,” Johnson said.

Five dams failed in Washington in the last 15 years. All were unpermitted.

“We decided, gee, we are finding so many [unpermitted dams] by happenstance, we should see what’s out there.”

Spillways

The biggest problem with these dams is the lack of adequate overflow spillways, Johnson said.

Most part property owners have been cooperative when they learn they have an illegal dam, Johnson said.

Most also didn’t even know they had a dam on their property.

“People who have called in have primarily been like, ‘I don’t have a dam. That’s a pond I see, not a dam,'” Johnson said.

If property owners don’t fix their dams, they can be fined $5,000 a day.

“Basically, if they don’t cooperate with what we are telling them to do, we can issue orders, or fine them,” Johnson said.

“But we wield that stick very cautiously. We get more done that way. We are trying to work with the property owners.”

On Monday: Property owners express shock, take stock.

________

Staff writer Paul Gottlieb can be reached at 360-417-3536 or at paul.gottlieb@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

Janet Lucas, left, finds a special purchase of a “mail manager” at Swains early Friday morning. Black Friday shoppers descended on the Port Angeles store at 8 a.m. There were dozens of early risers who went looking for special bargains on one of the biggest shopping days of the year. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Black Friday

Janet Lucas, left, finds a special purchase of a “mail manager” at… Continue reading

Clallam adopts housing needs

Population projected at 86,700 by 2045

The Wall That Heals, a Vietnam War memorial, coming to Port Townsend

Opening ceremony to be held at Jefferson County airport on Sept. 11

Sherry Phillips, chair of the Festival of Trees design committee, stands next to the tree Twelve Days of Christmas, which she designed personally. (Leah Leach/for Peninsula Daily News)
Port Angeles woman shares joy of decorating trees

Sherry Phillips lends talent for all of festival’s 34 years

EYE ON THE PENINSULA: Public hearings set on proposed 2025 budgets

Meetings across the North Olympic Peninsula

Serving up a Thanksgiving meal are, from left, Taylor Hale, Gina Landon, Shawn Lammers, Ryan Lammers, Sara Taylor and Jean Ball, all volunteers with Holiday Meals, located in the Tri-Area neighborhoods of Chimacum, Port Hadlock and Irondale. The group expected to serve up to 460 full Thanksgiving dinners with 287 being picked up, 118 delivered and 55 eaten at the Tri-Area Community Center. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Thanksgiving meals kick off holiday joy

Smiles, warmth light up Queen of Angels Catholic Church

From left, Gail Jangarrd, Bob Dunbar and Sammy Dionne treat a lucky dog to a biscuit made with organic, healthy and human-grade ingredients.
Gatheringplace to open public phase of capital campaign

Nonprofit to construct building for developmentally disabled

Port of Port Townsend on track to hit revenue goal

Agency receives eight bids on stormwater treatment project

The outside of the Vern Burton Community Center is decorated with giant Christmas balls and lighted trees on Wednesday for the opening ceremonies of the Festival of Trees. “White Christmas” was played by the Port Angeles Symphony Orchestra’s brass quintet and then sung by Amanda Bacon. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Festival of Trees opens

The outside of the Vern Burton Community Center is decorated with giant… Continue reading

Tamara Clinger decorates a tree with the theme of “Frosted Cranberries” on Monday at the Vern Burton Community Center in Port Angeles. The helping hand is Margie Logerwell. More than three dozen trees will be available for viewing during the 34th annual Festival of Trees event this weekend. Tickets are available at www.omhf.org. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Finishing touches

Tamara Clinger decorates a tree with the theme of “Frosted Cranberries” on… Continue reading

Grants to help Port Angeles port upgrades

Projects, equipment to reduce greenhouse gas emissions

Joseph Molotsky holds Jet, a Harris’s hawk. Jet, 14 or 15, has been at Discovery Bay Wild Bird Rescue for about seven years. Jet used to hunt with a falconer and was brought to the rescue after sustaining injuries while attempting to escape an attack from a gray horned owl in Eastern Washington. (Elijah Sussman/Peninsula Daily News)
Wild bird rescue to host open house

Officials to showcase expanded educational facilities