SPOKANE, Wash. — An small earthen dam in Stevens County that was rated the worst in the state in 2016 had a slightly improved condition when it was re-inspected in 2021, according to an analysis released this week by The Associated Press.
The Van Stone Pit Lake Dam was the only high-hazard dam in the state listed in unsatisfactory condition and in need of immediate repairs, the worst category, when it was inspected in 2016, the analysis found. But it is now one of 50 high-hazard dams in the state listed in poor condition, the analysis found.
The state regulates about 1,100 dams, most privately owned.
The Van Stone Pit Lake Dam is on land that used to belong to a timber company. The land was foreclosed on sometime after 2016 by Stevens County officials for failure to pay taxes.
That 2016 inspection found overgrown vegetation on the earthen dam, holes in the downstream face; seepage on an embankment slope; inadequate spillway to handle heavy rains; and three homes in the probable flood inundation area. Not much has changed, except the dam’s rating was raised one notch after the 2021 inspection.
“Overall, the inspectors revealed that the dam is in poor condition,” the state Department of Ecology said last week. “Ecology recommends that the dam be removed.”
The agency does not think the dam is in imminent danger of failing.
Dating from the 1920s, the earthen dam is of unknown construction “because it was not built under Ecology’s permitting process,” the agency said.
“It is important to note that we do not own this dam, but will be providing assistance because it is in the best interest of the community,” Ecology said.
The dam, about 23 miles north of Colville, serves no purpose and was created when construction of a road berm impounded the water, documents said. It is 25 feet tall, about 100 feet long and about 15 feet wide.
Dams are categorized by the hazard they pose were they to fail. A high-hazard dam is likely to result in the loss of at least one human life if it were to fail.
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