After 20 Years of Conflict, Savage Rapids Dam Removal is Underway
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Savage Rapids Dam
After twenty years of debate over whether it should be demolished, the Savage Rapids Dam, built in 1921 on the Rogue River in Oregon, is finally being removed. The dam was initially built to irrigate the Grants Pass Irrigation District during the era of pioneers, ranchers, farmers, mining and logging. In 1968, Congress recognized the Rogue as one of eight original rivers to be protected according to the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act. Beginning in 1988, conservation groups such as WaterWatch began advocating for the dam’s removal because of its obsolete technology and the harm it causes to the river’s salmon and steelhead fish.
These calls were met with protests from many in local communities, who felt threatened by the dam’s removal. After numerous lawsuits that cost the Grants Pass Irrigation District $1 million in legal fees, the district agreed to remove the dam. Workers are currently building a cofferdam to block water upstream and allow them to work in a dry area while demolishing the dam. The demolition is scheduled to be completed by December 2009, and the dam will be replaced by 12 water pumps to irrigate water to the 7,500-acre district.
-Jamie Mei Cheng, David Wallechinsky
Removal of Rogue Dam Spells End of Bitter Battle (by Jeff Barnard, Associated Press)
Free the Rogue River (WaterWatch)
Savage Rapids Dam, Rogue River near Grants Pass, Oregon (Bureau of Reclamation)
Bureau of Reclamation (AllGov)
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