TRAVERSE CITY — Could a chute buried underground for nearly 100 years be the cause of the October Brown Bridge Dam breach that flooded the Boardman River?
Or, was the breach instead caused by an ill-advised engineering and construction plan?
Interviews conducted by the Record-Eagle this week make clear that both scenarios could be possible causes for the Oct. 6 breach that caused the Brown Bridge pond to empty into the Boardman River as construction crews labored to remove the dam. Resulting flooding swelled the Boardman River by as much as five feet, threatening bridges and damaging 53 properties.
At the center of the investigation into the cause of the breach is the failure of a construction device known as a dewatering structure. Built into an earthen embankment next to the dam, it was supposed to slowly lower the pond over about three weeks. Instead, the pond rushed into the river in less than six hours.
This week, Sandra Sroonian — a senior project engineer on the Brown Bridge Dam removal — showed the Record-Eagle an old construction drawing of the Brown Bridge Dam from the 1920s. Next to a sketch of the dam is a drawing of a chute or channel, and the words "Proposed Diversion Channel."
The dam's original builders presumably considered the proposed diversion channel as a way to reroute the river around the dam construction site when it was first built in 1921.
However, Sroonian said that it's not known whether the diversion channel was ever built. If it was, it would have sat underneath the earthen embankment where the dewatering structure was built.
"It says 'proposed,'" Sroonian said of the old construction plans. "We aren't 100 percent certain it was even constructed."
After the pond raced past the dewatering structure Oct. 6, old steel sheet piling that project officials were previously unaware of was observed near its entryway, Sroonian said. It's not clear yet if the old sheet piling, situated some 14 feet below the water's surface, could be part of an old diversion channel.
"We don't know," Sroonian said. "Everything is speculation until we dry it out."
Project planners had only the old drawing to go on in designing the dewatering structure. No other records provided to planners by the city of Traverse City contained any information about an old diversion channel.
"You do your best due diligence," Sroonian said.
Mike Walton is co-owner of Molon Excavating, the construction company that built and installed the dewatering structure. When asked about the old sheet piling, he said, "We know it turns and goes into our dewatering structure."
"There is certainly some historical stuff (down there) we were not aware of," said Walton, who declined to speculate on a cause of the breach.
Byron Lane, head of the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality's safety unit, called attempts to discern a cause of the breach as "speculation" at this point.
One expert not involved in the Boardman project or investigation, Frank Christie, has 50 years of experience in dam construction and design. He questions why project planners ever considered building a dewatering structure into an earthen embankment to begin with, calling it "a very questionable practice" because it would disturb the dirt and allow water to find a pathway out.
"The failure of earthen embankments is caused by water seeping through them, so the first thing to do is don't build something that would cause seepage to occur," Christie said. "I would never consider doing anything like that."
When told of the old construction drawing showing a proposed diversion channel, Christie said the sheet piling that has emerged could be materials the original dam builders used to close off a diversion channel in 1921.
"If that's where the diversion channel was, you definitely would not want to go into that area and start mucking around in the embankment," Christie said. "If that's what the drawing shows, you'd want to be careful to stay away from it completely or find out what was there before you went through extensive work."
Christie said a more viable plan to drain a reservoir would be to send the water through the existing dam structure, then lower remaining waters by chipping away at the dam's concrete spillway.
He called the breach at the Brown Bridge dam "very remarkable."
"Dam removal in the United States is not something new," Christie said, adding, "I can't remember ... a single one that has failed during removal."
Lane said the dewatering structure was approved by DEQ officials prior to the project commencing.
Walton said dewatering structures have been used "many times in many places successfully" in dam removals.
Archive: Friday
Possible causes of flood raise questions
Theories include a buried chute or a bad structure
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Community in Brief: 05/25/2013
Sunday School; pancake breakfast;Memorial Day service; and more.
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FINAL: Beach Bums 4, Rockford 3
A four-run seventh inning powered the Traverse City Beach Bums to a 4-3 win over Rockford at Wuerfel Park Friday night.
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Prep sports scoreboard: 05/24/2013
A roundup of high school sports results from across northern Michigan:
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Snyder, Stabenow slated to speak at Helen Milliken service
United States Sen. Debbie Stabenow and Gov. Rick Snyder are among those expected to speak at a Monday, June 3, memorial service for former Michigan First Lady Helen Milliken.
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Memorial Day: Weather, gas prices and highway enforcement
An annual ceremony to honor veterans has a new location this year. More than 400 people are expected to attend a service Monday at the Grand Traverse Veterans Memorial Park. The ceremony begins at 10 a.m. at the park off 11th Street near Elmwood Avenue.
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Lakeside Shakespeare Theatre launches 10th year
The Lakeside Shakespeare Theatre launches its 10th Anniversary season Saturday with a "gala" fundraiser at the Oliver Art Center.
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Traverse City schools officials prepare for bond
Traverse City Area Public Schools officials said they’ve learned from last year’s failed bond campaign and hear loud-and-clear what voters want in a 2013 capital improvement project proposal.
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Editorial: Fairness in enforcement must apply to meters
The issue: TC increasing Saturday parking meter enforcement. Our view: This can’t be a sometimes proposition.
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Evansville sweeps Beach Bums
Ever have Otter Pops as a kid? Well, it was just about cold enough to make them Thursday at Wuerfel Park.
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Letters to the Editor: 05/24/2013
Not listening?; We have been duped.
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Runners ready for Bayshore
Aside from the race packet pick-up, scheduled to take place today from 5 until 9 p.m. at Traverse City Central High School, no one would even know that in fewer than 24 hours more than 7,000 runners will have descended on Traverse City for the 31st running of the Bayshore event, which includes a marathon, half-marathon and 10K.
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Homecoming of sorts for ex-Bum Morrow
It was a good homecoming of sorts for Bryce Morrow. Wednesday’s rain-out allowed him to hang around with former college roommate Jake Sabol, who was the winning pitcher in Traverse City’s 10-0 win Tuesday.
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Country artist Niemann sings 'good stories'
Country music fan Rachael Warren knows the words to most every Jerrod Niemann tune that hits the airwaves. So the Traverse City woman plans to be front and center when Niemann appears at Ground Zero on Saturday, June 1.
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Assumed Names: 05/24/2013
Assumed Names filed in Grand Traverse County:
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Utility cuts trees beyond easements, property owners say
Lynn Tilson is trying to save 374 of her red pines from the chainsaw. Michigan Electric Transmission Company marked the trees for removal, beyond the 50-foot easement Tilson believes the utility has on either side of its power lines.
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Conservancy offers farmers a shorter-term option for land
For the last 30 summers, Dennis and Barb Dean traveled from their Alaska home to tend to their sweet and tart cherry orchards in Williamsburg.
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Prep Sports Roundup: Traverse City West tops Gaylord
Traverse City West won a share of the Big North Conference girls soccer title on Thursday after defeating Gaylord 4-0 in the regular season finale. (Plus more)
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Forum: Time to act now on military sexual assaults
America is facing an epidemic of sexual assaults in our military. The facts are truly frightening.
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Sports in Brief: 05/24/2013
YMCA to host family fun nights; Boating safety class offered June 25; Tigers help promote teen-driving safety. (Plus more)
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Elk Rapids now has authorized baccalaureate school
Elk Rapids Middle School is being recognized for adopting a world-renowned education style, and other local districts are prepared to follow suit, thanks in part to a $3 million Kellogg Foundation grant.
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Movie Capsules: 05/24/2013
New this week — Epic: A teenager finds herself transported to a deep forest setting where a battle between the forces of good and evil is taking place. Rated PG. (GT9)
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Night Life Calendar: 05/24/2013
What's happening after dark across northern Michigan:
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BATA bus struck during three-vehicle accident
A Bay Area Transportation Agency bus was damaged in a three-vehicle collision at the intersection of Three Mile and Hammond Road.
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Benzie County home destroyed in fire
Benzonia Township Fire Department Chief John Hanmer said units responded to the fire on Thursday at about 11 a.m. He said no one was inside the Cook Road home and the occupants were at work.
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Eligibility issues cut short TC St. Francis baseball season
St. Francis High School’s baseball team’s season prematurely ended.
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Community in Brief: 05/25/2013



