10/01/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/01/2024 13:58
Today, Congressman John Moolenaar (R-MI) and Congresswoman Debbie Dingell (D-MI) reintroduced bipartisan legislation that makes reforms and improvements to dam and hydropower safety operations and oversight in the United States. The National Dam and Hydropower Safety Improvements Act would enhance dam and hydropower safety operation requirements nationwide and aims to modernize existing infrastructure through the development of new best practices and improved communications between the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and states.
Moolenaar and Dingell originally pushed for the provisions after the 2020 Edenville Dam and Sanford Dam failures in Michigan caused $200 million in damage throughout the region's downstream communities, destroying homes, businesses, roads, and bridges.
"This bipartisan legislation addresses failures in existing law and will help ensure compliance with the safety regulations that are needed to protect the American people," said Moolenaar. "We know in Michigan that the failures of federal bureaucrats, state officials, and a negligent dam owner led to devastating consequences, and we must update the laws to prevent that from happening again."
"The 2020 breach of the Edenville and Sanford dams caused extensive damage in Michigan and its downstream communities. It drowned homes, businesses, and whole cities," said Dingell. "It is clear there are serious gaps in existing laws that need to be addressed, and this catastrophe could have been prevented. We can never let this happen again in any city in America with a high hazard dam."
The National Dam and Hydropower Safety Improvements Act would specifically do the following:
Moolenaar and Dingell originally pushed for the provisions after the 2020 Edenville Dam and Sanford Dam failures in Michigan caused $200 million in damage throughout the region's downstream communities, destroying homes, businesses, roads, and bridges. Dam operator Boyce Hydro had a long history of dam safety and compliance problems. Last year, a U.S. District Court Judge ruled dam operator Boyce Hydro "disregarded threats to the safety and integrity of the dam, and absolutely was responsible for its failure," resulting in "one of the worst environmental disasters that the state of Michigan has ever experienced."