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Craic@frontier.com's avatar

Years ago, when the free flowing river I've lived beside for 37 years, was pushed for a large dam project, an alternative was proposed. That was to build thousands of small temporary impoundments to hold water for two to three days, releasing slowly what would normally rush into the river and cause flooding. We have several of these occurring naturally near us. Low cost flood control for a mountainous state, hasn't happened however. We still have damaging flood regularly.

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Kim's avatar

Free flowing water is good for human psyche and spirit in addition to ecosystems. Removing dams and leveraging a river systems natural tendencies with engineering and science that strikes a balance rather than controlling flow is viable, feasible, and working in Pacific Northwest. Klamath River salmon are returning. Elwha dam removal ecosystem significant benefit in short time frame. Washington culvert improvement projects another example people, infrastructure, and ecosystems can coexist.

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