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At work
Since the beginning of the Chippewa Flood Control System, and
during the past twenty-five years, much of the needed maintenance
could not be completed as planned due to lack of funding. This
caused many of the channel banks to become overgrown with woody
vegetation, which made it near to impossible to maintain the banks
or the culverts installed for the purpose of draining the floodwaters.
In addition, as trees grew, many would lose branches or fall into
the channel causing log jams, bank erosion, and more localized
areas of flooding due to the inability of the stream flow to get
through the blockage.
Maintaining the 33 miles of channel helps to ensure that flood
waters will recede from the land, quickly and efficiently.
During the past ten years, an effort by the Chippewa Subdistrict
has been made to provide funding through an assessment permitted
by the Conservancy District Laws of Ohio.
*For activities prior to 2005, contact
us.
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These assessment dollars, which can only be spent on maintenance
of the Chippewa Flood Control Project, have been utilized on several
projects designed to return the Project to its original design
objectives.
Annual Maintenance must be done consistently to keep the
Flood Control System working properly.
Special Projects are necessary to keep pace with aging infrastructure
of the system's components and changes in our region due to new
land development.
Visit our Shorle-Blough project
to see a recent example of Annual Maintenance. Our GPS
/ GIS mapping is a Special Project allowing us to locate and
evaluate nearly 700 hydraulic structures originally installed
throughout the channels. When completed, Subdistrict staff will
be able to prepare a proactive maintenance schedule to ensure
that structures are repaired or replaced before failure occurs. |