A congressional panel investigating the early response to the …
View of the Station Fire from SkyFOX HD on the afternoon of Thursday, August 27th.
View of the Station Fire from SkyFOX HD on the afternoon of Thursday, August 27th.
A congressional panel investigating the early response to the …
Authorities investigating the Station Fire, the largest fire in…
Here's how you can donate money to help the families of the two firefighters who lost …
Vice President Joe Biden and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger joined …
Fire commanders ordered a new round of backfires on Tuesday in …
A giant amphibious air tanker made a huge water drop on flames …
The Wildlife Waystation, a home for numerous exotic animals, is…
The Cottonwood Fire between Hemet and Idyllwild was considered …
The Morris Fire could adversely impact the Los Angeles County …
Updated: Thursday, 27 Aug 2009, 11:52 PM PDT
Published : Thursday, 27 Aug 2009, 11:50 PM PDT
Posted by: Scott Coppersmith
San Gabriel Canyon (myFOXla.com) - While more than 1,000 firefighters toiled in heat wave
conditions to gain the upper hand on two mountain fires above Azusa
and Altadena, a Los Angeles County deputy director of Water
Resources said today the Morris Fire could adversely impact the
drinking water supply for more than one million people.
Post-fire erosion and accelerated sedimentation -- not
pollution -- are the primary concerns to water officials. Vast
mountainsides are scorched above the man-made reservoirs in San
Gabriel Canyon, and Morris Fire perimeter maps today also showed
burned areas bordering both bodies of water.
With vegetation burned off an estimated 1,800 acres or more,
erosion rates and volume will increase on the steepest slopes with
or without rains, according to geologists and geomorphologists.
Increased erosion in burned watersheds that empty into the
San Gabriel and Morris reservoirs could mean those dammed bodies of
water will have to be drained and cleared of sediment far ahead of
the normal schedule, said Christopher Stone, assistant deputy
director for Water Resources, Los Angeles County Department of
Public Works.
The same thing happened after the 2002 Curve and Williams
fires, when it took three years and cost $35 million to remove 5
million cubic yards of debris from the reservoirs, Stone said.
Draining the reservoirs over long periods of time can deprive
local water vendors of up to 250,000 acre-feet that could be
available in normal years, Stone said.
"In an average year we drain 250,000 acre-feet out of the
reservoirs to spreading grounds," Stone told City News Service.
"There it percolates underground, then it's pumped out and treated
for drinking water supply. An acre-foot can supply two families of
four for one year."
The typical annual yield from the San Gabriel and Morris
reservoirs supplies "well over a million people," Stone said.
"That's a huge impact," Stone said. "It's a situation we'll
have to monitor. A trigger point for draining the reservoirs will
be whether we can operate valves and gates on the dams. It will
depend on the rain seasons and when we get heavy rains."
Morris Dam was built in 1934, and according to California
Institute of Technology archives, Morris Reservoir was used for
testing rockets and torpedoes during World War II. The Metropolitan
Water District had jurisdiction for several decades, but the Los
Angeles County Department of Public Works has been responsible for
both dams and reservoirs since1995.
The San Gabriel Mountains that comprise all the high ground
in the Angeles National Forest are "highly erosive" and tons of
sediment come down every year in normal conditions, Stone said. The
two reservoirs in San Gabriel Canyon have to be drained and cleared
of sediment every 10 to 15 years in normal circumstances -- without
fires, Stone said.
At the Morris Fire incident command post in Irwindale,
Angeles National Forest Technician Jim Garner explained some basic
geology about the eroding San Gabriels.
"These are the fastest-growing mountains in the world, I
believe, and they are also the fastest disintegrating, because of
the geologic uplifting, the earthquakes and the faults," Garner
said, standing next to a fire perimeter map that showed parts of
the Morris and the San Gabriel reservoirs. "Even without the fires,
you have a tremendous amount of sediment and material coming out of
the North, West and East forks of the San Gabriel River. These are
huge drainages.
"That's just in normal conditions. Now you take a fire and
wipe out all that vegetation and there's nothing to hold the
topsoil and sediment back," Garner said. "So when it rains it
accelerates movement of debris and volume of material going into
the water in those reservoirs. There will be more turbidity and
silt in the water."
Los Angeles County is the custodian of the dams and
reservoirs, and flood control is the primary use of the dams,
Garner said.
"About every 10 to 15 years they have to drain the reservoirs
and remove the silt, in normal conditions without fires," Garner
said. "I do believe they get drinking water out of them."
Congressman David Dreier, R-San Dimas, who represents the
26th Congressional District that includes the areas still burning
in the Morris and Station fires, visited an incident command post
in Irwindale today for a briefing on the fires.
"My main concern is with 100-degree temperatures, we have two
fires going and there is the threat of more fires starting in these
conditions," Dreier told CNS. "There is no silver lining to these
fires. The only benefit that comes is learning how to combat the
next fire.
"What I'm saying should be done today is that people take
precautions to protect their families, pets and property," Dreier
said. "And they need to listen to law enforcement in the event
evacuations become necessary."