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If a deluge comes, it will be because nature found a way to thwart a half-century of flood prevention. Earlier this year, an abutment to the Howard Hanson Dam on the upper reaches of the Green River was found to be seriously weakened after record January rains. To reduce the danger the abutment might fail, the Corps of Engineers, which operates the flood control dam 22 miles east in the Cascade foothills, immediately restricted the reservoir to about 30 percent of capacity, greatly reducing its ability to limit how much water is released downstream. Corps district commander Col. Anthony Wright has said that to avoid further damage to the abutment, there is a 25 percent chance he might have to release enough water this winter to flood much of the valley. He says he will do everything possible to operate the dam without flooding anybody. "But I'm not going to endanger the lives of the people downstream by storing too much water before we get this dam fixed," Wright said. "The Corps of Engineers tells us to be prepared for inches to feet," says Capt. Kyle Ohashi of the fire department in Kent, which could see 8 feet or more of water in worst-case scenarios. "All we can do is assume the worst, prepare for it and hope it never gets to that point." Mamie Petersen remembers the pre-dam floods near the Auburn home she and husband Roy have shared for 59 years. She and her husband loaded up on free sandbags at a city park. "Let me tell you, that river is boss," she said.
[Associated
Press;
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