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Commerce Cabinet
Feb. 6 Newsletter on Lake Cumberland/Wolf Creek Dam

Press Release Date:  Thursday, February 08, 2007  
Contact Information:  Contact: Chris Gilligan
502-564-4270 x168
chris.gilligan@ky.gov
 


Friends of Lake Cumberland

 

Don’t forget…

The Corps’ first public hearing (of three) on the Lake Cumberland/Wolf Creek Dam project is set for Tuesday night in Nashville, depending upon the weather.

THE location has been changed to the Maxwell House Hotel.

The 6:30 p.m. meeting will be at the Central and West Ballroom Convention Wing of the Maxwell House Hotel, 2025 Metrocenter Blvd., Nashville.

The AP article in yesterday’s newsletter, and reposted again at the bottom of today’s newsletter, was picked up by at least 90 media outlets across the country, that I found. It would be a safe assumption the stories are all mostly similar to the version below, with some edits possible to cut down on length, and were posted on web pages and not necessarily in print. Media outlets included:

                                   

Guardian Unlimited, UK              Houston Chronicle,                    MLive.com, MI 

San Francisco Chronicle, CA      Forbes                                      FOX News 

Kansas City Star, MO                San Jose Mercury News, CA      Washington Post, DC 

Cleveland Plain Dealer, OH        Cincinnati Enquirer, OH              Wyoming News, WY 

Lompoc Record, CA                  Durham Herald Sun, NC             Ottawa Citizen, Canada

Long Beach Press-TelegramCA                                                Sarasota Herald-TribuneFL 

Mid Columbia Tri City Herald, WA                                               WKRNTN 

Journal Gazette and Times-Courier, IL                                         The Casper Star Tribune, WY 

Twin Falls Times-News, ID          Bismarck Tribune, ND                The Kindred Times, UT 

OlberlinKS                              SierraTimes.com                       Brocktown NewsNV 

Florida Times-Union, FL             Ely Times, NV                           Pierceland HeraldCanada 

The Westfall Weekly NewsCanada                                            Leading The Charge, Australia 

Herald News Daily, ND              Jackson News-Tribune               Jordan Falls News, IA 

Dunton Springs Evening Post, CO                                             Meadow Free Press, ID 

Hinesberg JournalCanada        Sky Valley Journal, WY              Herald News Daily, ND 

Central Florida News 13|, FL       The Ledger, FL                          phillyBurbs.com, PA

Chandler News-DispatchMN     Akron Farm Report, NE              Lex Herald Leader

Howell Times and Transcript, UT                                                 Penn Live, PA 

New Hope Courier, OK               Prescott Herald, AZ                   San Luis Obispo TribuneCA

Herald News Daily, ND              White Rock Reviewer, SD          Meadow Free Press, ID 

Pioneer Times-Journal, NM        Sky Valley Journal, WY              Tuscaloosa News, AL 

Hendersonville Times News, NC                                                 Bradenton Herald, FL

Ottawa Recorder, Canada          Belleville News-DemocratIL      The Benton Crier, IA 

Winston-Salem Journal, NC        The State, SC                            WAVE, KY

Times Picayune, LA                   Fort Wayne Journal Gazette, IN             

Wilmington Morning Star, NC     Myrtle Beach Sun News, SC       Lexington Dispatch, NC 

OregonLive.com, OR                 Columbus Ledger-EnquirerGA  Charlotte Observer, NC

Contra Costa Times, CA            Centre Daily Times, PA              Monterey County HeraldCA 

WRAL.com, NC                         Biloxi Sun Herald, MS                Fort Wayne News Sentinel, IN 

Fort Worth Star Telegram, TX     Town Hall, DC                           Times Daily, AL 

Denver Post, CO                       Worcester Telegram, MA            Seattle Times, WA 

Boston Herald, MA                    WHAS 11.com, KY                    CBS NEWS

ABC NEWS                               NBC NEWS                               WBKO-TV, Bowling Green

Dickinson-Herald, TN                 Herald Times, Bloomington, IN

OPEN BOAT RAMPS

Representatives from The KY Dept. of Fish and Wildlife /W talked to Corps officials today and here is the most up to date list on OPEN ramps:

Fall Creek (only bass-size boats; others can not)

Waitsboro (has some drift issues, but should be removed shortly)

Lees Ford Dock

Jamestown Marina

Grider Hill

Cumberland Pt

Holcombs Landing

Conley Bottom Resort (only bass-size boats; others can not)

 

President George W. Bush’s proposed budget includes full funding for phase one of the Wolf Creek Dam Repair, pending Congressional approval.  Experts say this part of the budget is rarely modified or changed.

 

CONTACT INFO:

If you have any questions, please e-mail them back to me at this address: chris.gilligan@ky.gov and we will try and get you an answer.

 

If interested in learning about the KY Tourism Development Loan Program – contact Todd at 502-564-8067 or todd.cassidy@ky.gov.

 

Past newsletters are available at www.commerce.ky.gov.  Click on the “News” icon on the left side or scroll down to the bottom of the page to view the.

 

ITEMS OF INTEREST

 

http://lakecumberland.com/

 

Army Corps of Engineers Lake Cumberland/Wolf Creek Dam web page. http://www.lrn.usace.army.mil/pao/issues/WOLcommo/

 

If you want to monitor the level here is the website: http://www.lrn.usace.army.mil/hh/resplots/wol_a.html

 

On the Net: Corps Nashville District:

http://www.lrn.usace.army.mil/

 

DEVELOPMENTS

 

Corps of Engineers Public Meeting Schedule
_ Monday, Feb. 12, 6:30 p to 8:00 pm, Hendersonville First Baptist Church

_ Thursday, Feb. 15, 6:30 p.m., Gallatin City Hall, 132 W. Main St., Gallatin. ___

RECENT NEWS ARTICLES

 

http://tennessean.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070206/NEWS01/70206019

Tuesday, 02/06/07
Crowd expected at dam meeting

 

NATIONAL AP ARTICLE–

 

Engineers Lower Water on Ky. Lake

By DYLAN T. LOVAN - AP

 

JAMESTOWN, Ky. (AP) - Rollie Vonlinger looked sadly across Lake Cumberland at some of the fishing spots he has hit over the past 30 years. It is going to be hard to get to some of those spots from now on, because the boat ramp he normally uses no longer reaches the water.

"It's enough to want to make you cry," said Vonlinger, who comes from Danville, about 55 miles away, to fish on the biggest manmade lake east of the Mississippi.

To relieve pressure on a dangerously weakened dam and avert a catastrophic collapse, federal engineers are lowering the water on Lake Cumberland, leaving boat ramps, marinas and swimming areas high and dry.

Vonlinger and other fishermen wonder how they will get their boats out on the water. And businesses that depend on the lake, which draws 5 million visitors each year, worry their fortunes will drop with the water line.

The 63,000-acre lake is held back by the concrete-and-earthen Wolf Creek Dam, 258 feet high and nearly a mile long. The dam was built in the 1940s and '50s about 150 miles northeast of Nashville, Tenn., to provide hydroelectric power and control devastating flooding along the Cumberland River.

The project also created a tourist economy in what was once an impoverished part of the South, with the lake attracting nearly twice as many people per year as Yellowstone National Park.

The problem is that water has been seeping under the dam and eroding the limestone on which the concrete rests. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers decided it requires $300 million in emergency repairs, warning that a failure would send a wall of water into several small Kentucky and Tennessee cities and kill at least 100 people, harm more than 11,000 structures and cause $3 billion in damage.

The plan to drop the lake by 40 feet from its summer level of 720 feet above sea level, announced somewhat suddenly in January, sent a shiver though the region's booming businesses, who fear the low water could cut the number of summertime visitors.

Every restaurant, hotel and motel, bait shop, marina, houseboat rental business, campsite, boat builder and real estate agency that depends on lake tourism stands to be affected by the repair project, which is expected to take seven years.

While the dam is not in danger of imminent collapse, the levee failures in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina in 2005 have made the Corps more cautious, according to Lt. Col. Steven J. Roemhildt, commander of the Corps' Nashville District.

With only a few days' notice, the Corps pulled the plug on the lake, forcing business owners along the lake's 1,000 miles of shoreline to scramble to rearrange boat docks that would be otherwise stuck in shallow water.

Heavy trucks have moved into an area near the dam, and workers have begun boring holes into the earth and pouring a runny concrete, called grout, into the underground gaps. It is the third time since the 1960s that the Corps has worked to stop serious seepage through the underground limestone, or karst, which is prone to sinkholes, caverns and underground streams.

At Alligator II, a large marina, a crew of five men was busy moving a long section of dock that served as a mooring to dozens of fancy houseboats, some nearly 80 feet long with patio furniture, screen doors and stainless-steel barbecue grills. Some owners pay up to $5,000 a year to dock there.

"It's not just going to affect the docks. It's going to affect every business that has anything to do with the lake," said Mark Bloyd, a marina employee whose crew was using a winch to lift one of the marina's 7,000-pound concrete anchors and move the dock more than 20 yards out.

Business owners estimate there will be 20,000 fewer surface acres of water to boat on this summer, and they are bracing for an estimated $23.6 million loss in direct sales in the peak season, according to the Army Corps of Engineers.

"I've got people calling right and left. I've got people with reservations calling, thinking they should cancel because they think we're not going to have any water," said James Flatt, owner of the Alligator II dock.

The project could also lead to large-scale fish kills, because keeping the water level low will raise the temperature of the water in the Cumberland River below the dam, threatening cold-water fish species like the brown and rainbow trout raised at a nearby federal fish hatchery, Roemhildt said.

Some marina operators are hoping for the best. One of the biggest marinas, Lee's Ford Resort, has 900 boat slips and had to move some docks.

"I think when folks get over the thought that there's not going to be any water and they see there's plenty of water, all those fears will go away," said Jeff Cress, marina manager.

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press.

 

Last Updated 2/8/2007
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