Aggie_3 said:
schmellba99 said:
Aggie_3 said:
Bottom line GBRA has spent 25 million total on as they say repair and maintenance on all the dams total over the last 55 years according to what they've been saying. That is gross mismanagement
You do realize that $25MM over a 55 year period on submerged structures isn't all that much, right?
And that there are literally hundreds of factors that go into determining what repairs are necessary, when they are necessary, etc. And that often times you can make an inspection on a structure one day and it is is really great shape, but a month later after a major event things can change significantly.
I am not absolving GBRA of wrongdoing - I'm sure there has been mismanagement to some degree. Hell, it's a government agency after all. But the blanket statements made out of anger and likely a high degree of ignorance doesn't make you look good or smart either.
These lakes were created 80+ years ago with the specific purpose of providing power through hydroelectric dams, a metric crap ton of things has changed in that 80 year time frame - including the fact that those hydroelectric dams are small, obsolete and have far outlived their purpose given that there are a great many more efficient power generation sources in the area. The lakes have, as evidenced by this thread, become defacto private lakes for the landowners on those lakes. They have been relegated to pretty much a recreational capacity for the most part. I would argue that they are a source water for treatment, but evidently there are contingencies available because GBRA is willing to drain the lakes.
This is a Guadalupe County/GBRA/landowner issue as it currently stands.
And you do realize that's what I was basically getting at that 25 million in 55 years is a joke
No I didn't, thought you were referencing that the $25MM was wasted and that was what was gross mismanagement.
As to the dollar figure - you can't really say it's good or bad that only $25MM has been spent. Up until recently, there was no real need to spend money on the dams. Infrastructure is a funny thing in that it doesn't necessarily degrade or decay on a linear basis. Sometimes you simply have catastrophic failures that were not anticipated nor could have.
And sometimes you have situations where the can is kicked down the road for the next guy to deal with. I have no clue if this is the case, only that looking at the design drawings for Dunalp - it was not designed with maintenance as a priority, not unusual for a 1930's design.