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US Army Corps of Engineers BUILDING STRONG ® Boise River Feasibility Study Ellen Berggren, PMP Outreach Coordinator/ Project Manager Idaho Governor’s Roadless Commission Briefing June 10, 2015
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BUILDING STRONG ® Study Authority Water Resources Development Act (WRDA) of 1999, Section 41 - Flood control authority WRDA 2007, Section 4038 - Added ecosystem restoration & water supply authority - Pre-agreement credit to Sponsor for $500K 2
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BUILDING STRONG ® Non-Federal Sponsor Idaho Water Resources Board (IWRB) Established by Idaho Constitution Appointed by Governor Develops and implements State Water Plans Idaho Department of Water Resources provides project support and coordination Pays 50 percent of feasibility study costs 3
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BUILDING STRONG ® 4 Boise River Watershed Avg. Annual Runoff = 1,940 KAF System Storage = 950 KAF Arrowrock Dam Reclamation Completed in 1915 Storage = 286 KAF Anderson Ranch Dam Reclamation Completed in 1945 Storage = 418 KAF Lucky Peak Dam USACE Completed in 1954 Storage = 264 KAF
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BUILDING STRONG ® Flood Risk Problems Extensive floodplain development $10 billion of property at risk Repeated minor flooding Protection to ~ 3% event from existing system Largest population center in ID 40% of ID residents live in the Boise River Watershed 5
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BUILDING STRONG ® Boise Rr Flood Hydrology 1943 – Flood in Eagle, ID Bankfull flow = 6,500 cfs (at Glenwood) Flood stage = 7,000 cfs (at Glenwood)
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BUILDING STRONG ® 3% chance flood - 8,000 cfs 0.2% chance flood - 35,000 cfs 1% chance flood – 16,600 cfs 0.2% chance flood - Infrastructure at risk over $10 billion* 1% chance flood - Infrastructure at risk over $1 billion* Source: Ada and Canyon County Hazard Mitigation Plans, 2011 and 2013 7
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BUILDING STRONG ® Water Supply Problems Semi-Arid: 8-12” of precip. per year High Population Growth: - 4.5% 1990 to 2000 - 3.3% between 2000-2010 - 4 th fastest growing state population 98% of existing DCMI water is from groundwater Prohibitions on development of additional groundwater sources Curtailment of junior water rights 8
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BUILDING STRONG ® Water Supply Problems Projected increase in water demand for the 50-year study period (estimated future needs additional 83,000 – 170,000 acre-feet) Constrained storage system Climate variability Interconnected surface and ground water Uncertain reliability of current and future water supply 9
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BUILDING STRONG ® Study Objectives 1) Reduce flood damage and life safety risk 2) Increase operational flexibility and resiliency 3) Increase conveyance 4) Reduce the potential for severe erosion and/or sudden channel migration 5) Increase water supply to meet current and future water demands 10
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BUILDING STRONG ® Alternatives MEASURES ALTERNATIVES ABCD No Action Arrowrock Dam Raise X XX Managed Aquifer Recharge X Upgrade Irrigation Headgates XXX Replace Push-Up Dams XX Upgrade Bridges X Controlled Flooding of Pits/Ponds X Temporary Conveyance of Water In Floodplain XXX Flow Split Structure X Enhanced Water Conservation Non-Structural Measures XX
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BUILDING STRONG ® Arrowrock Dam Raise Multi-purpose Storage Flood risk management Water supply Potential Maximum Raise Dam raise up to 74 feet Up to 270,000 acre-feet increased storage About 6.5 miles of river inundated 12
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BUILDING STRONG ® 13 Maximum Potential Raise Dam raise - 74 ft. Reservoir elevation increase - about 70 ft. Approx 270, 000 acre-feet additional storage. Approx. 6.5 additional river miles inundated
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BUILDING STRONG ® Timeline January 2016Tentatively Selected Plan Milestone* February 2016Draft Feasibility Report / Environmental Impact Statement released for public review May 2016Agency Decision Milestone* December 2016Final Feasibility Report / Environmental Impact Statement March 2017Civil Works Review Board* June 2017Chief’s Report*
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BUILDING STRONG ® Questions? Lucky Peak Project, 1954
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