TRAVERSE CITY — A lead investigator in a breach at the Brown Bridge dam said a construction device that failed and caused the Boardman River to flood must be used again to reroute the river before it can be fully inspected.
Byron Lane of Michigan's Dam Safety Unit leads the investigation into what caused Brown Bridge Pond to empty into the Boardman on Oct. 6 while construction workers labored to remove the dam.
At the time, workers were using a construction device adjacent to the dam known as a dewatering structure. The device was supposed to slowly lower the pond over about three weeks, but instead waters breached the structure and rushed into the river in less than six hours. Extensive flooding down river damaged 53 properties.
Lane said the investigation into the cause of the breach requires an inspection of the base of the dewatering structure, as well as the "subsurface" below it, but "a good portion of the structure that failed is still underwater."
Project engineers recently submitted a plan to draw down the water surrounding the dewatering structure, but first, he said, they will have remove the entire dam and powerhouse. That means the Boardman River will have to be redirected back through the dewatering structure — the device that failed — even though investigators haven't yet had a chance to inspect it.
"We are reasonably comfortable this will work," Lane said. "It's important for us to know why this dam failed, and we are comfortable with what (project engineers) are proposing. It's not an ideal situation ... ideally we could get the water through there some other way."
For now, the river is running through what amounts to a hole, Lane said.
"There's basically a hole in the dam, in the embankment, where the water is flowing through," Lane said. "It's not designed and it's not reinforced. It's not the type of situation where we want the water to go through long-term."
Lane said the river will be forced back through the dewatering structure to facilitate the dam and powerhouse removal. Then the river will be directed back through where the dam sits, and investigators will finally get to look at the dewatering structure.
"The river has got to go somewhere," Lane said. "It's coming down at 200 cubic feet per second, and somehow the water has got to go down through. We can't shut off the river."
It could take up to two months to implement the full plan to remove the dam and get a look at the dewatering structure, meaning identifying a formal cause of the breach will take even longer.
Lane hopes investigation findings will be a lesson for other communities that tackle the complexities of removing aging dams. Brown Bridge Dam is one of three scheduled for removal on the Boardman.
"It's obviously disturbing and upsetting," Lane said of the breach. "Everyone involved is disappointed and upset. We will try to find out what happened and put that in our lessons learned category because dams will continue to be removed.
"Engineers and contractors around the country will learn from this," Lane said. "It's not just a Michigan thing. Dams are being removed all over the country."
Boardman River flood
Structure that failed in dam breach must be used again
It can't be fully inspected until it again reroutes river
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Possible causes of flood raise questions
Could a chute buried underground for nearly 100 years be the cause of the October Brown Bridge Dam breach that flooded the Boardman River?
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Boardman flood: 911 call warned of water release
A city employee was the first to warn of Boardman River flooding as pond waters breached Brown Bridge dam.
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In a call to Grand Traverse County 911 dispatchers he warned, "people should get off the creek." -
Engineer 'regrets' dam breach
A lead engineer on the Brown Bridge Dam removal expressed regret Monday for a breach that caused flooding to Boardman River properties.
Continued ... - Is it important to find the cause of the Brown Bridge Dam failure?
- Cause of Brown Bridge flood must be determined
- Friday, October 12, 2012
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Boardman flood leaves frustration in its wake
Pam Hoyt knows the furnace, tools and water softener can be replaced.
Continued ... - Tuesday, October 9, 2012
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Editorial: Flood demands explanation
The issue: Boardman River flood. Our view: Questions, questions, questions.
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Damage claims swelling
Property damage claims from flooding on the Boardman River are swelling: officials said they've received 30 to 40 claims from homeowners swamped when Brown Bridge Pond abruptly emptied.
Continued ... - Monday, October 8, 2012
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Project managers go over flood damage
The day after Brown Bridge Pond emptied in an unstoppable rush and flooded the Boardman River, managers of a project to restore the river to its natural state gathered to assess damages and figure out what went wrong.
Continued ... - Sunday, October 7, 2012
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GT Co. officials issue advisory for flood victims
Grand Traverse County Health Department officials issued a health advisory for property owners affected by Boardman River flooding.
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Boardman flood: Heartbreak, relief, questions
A breach of Brown Bridge Dam unleashed countless tons of water into the Boardman and abruptly emptied Brown Bridge Pond. Some on the river sustained home and property damage in a stunning development in a years-in-the-making project to dismantle Boardman River dams and return the river to much of its natural flow path.
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Rising Boardman River alarms residents
Breach of Brown Bridge Dam prompts home evacuations
Continued ... - Saturday, October 6, 2012
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Swollen Boardman begins to recede
Flood waters that threatened Ed and Mary Flees' home just downstream from the breached Brown Bridge Dam began to recede late this afternoon, and signaled a possible end to their peril.
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Boardman flooding evacuation order lifted
TRAVERSE CITY — The evacuation order has been lifted. Residents are allowed to return to their homes. Sections of some roads remain closed.
River Road is still closed to through traffic between Keystone and Garfield Road. Garfield Road between River Road and Voice Road in Paradise Township will also be closed. It is unknown how long these roads will be closed, but it will at least be overnight.
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Garfield Road section closed
Garfield Road south of River Road is closed because of flooding on the Boardman River.
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Boardman homeowners: "Heartbreak"
"Heartbreak." That's how Mary Flees termed the Boardman River's relentless crawl toward her Brown Bridge Road house this afternoon.
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Immediate evacuation ordered along Boardman
Grand Traverse County sheriff’s officials released the following at 1:45 p.m. today:
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Flooding on Boardman River
The Boardman River partially breached Brown Bridge Dam in Grand Traverse County today and prompted officials to announce an evacuation of homes along the river.
An estimated foot to 24" of river water began to pour late this morning through an area where a dewatering structure had been erected as part of a project to remove dams along the Boardman.
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Possible causes of flood raise questions



