Regulator
Hoover Dam. |
"Your state is helping to protect you from dam failure. State governments regulate 80 percent of the approximately 87,000 dams listed in the National Inventory of Dams (NID). The NID is a congressionally authorized database, which documents dams in the U.S. and its territories. The database contains information about the dam's location, size, purpose, type, last inspection, regulatory facts, and other technical data. The information contained in the NID is updated approximately every two years and is maintained and published by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), and cooperation with the Association of State Dam Safety Officials (ASDSO), the states and their territories, and federal dam-regulating agencies."[1]
State Dam Safety Programs
"Although state programs vary in the scope of their authority, program activities typically provide for:
- Evaluation of existing dams,
- Review of plans and specifications for dam construction and major repairs,
- Periodic inspections of construction on new and existing dams, and
- Review and approval of Emergency Action Plans."[1]
Best Practices Resources
Federal Guidelines for Dam Safety, FEMA, 2004
Model State Dam Safety Program (FEMA P-316), FEMA, 2007
Trainings
On-Demand Webinar: The History of Dam Safety Governance in the US Including Risk Analysis
On-Demand Webinar: Introduction to Public Safety Risk Evaluation and Treatment for Dams and Levees
Citations:
Revision ID: 5026
Revision Date: 12/06/2022