SFPUC OKs Calaveras Dam Replacement in Water Improvement Program

After seven years, San Francisco's Planning Commission certified the project's environmental impact report for work that is designed to improve Bay Area water supply in the Alameda Creek habitat.

The San Francisco Public Utilities Commission (SFPUC) unanimously approved the Calaveras Dam Replacement Project following certification of the project's final environmental impact report, according to the SFPUC communications department.

The project will replace the existing seismically unsafe Calaveras Dam with a 210-feet high new earth and rock-fill dam adjacent to the existing structure. The new dam will restore the water storage levels of the Calaveras Reservoir upwards of 31 billion gallons of water — almost half of the total Hetch Hetchy water system storage capacity in the Bay Area. Since 2001, the dam has operated at 30 percent of capacity due to seismic concerns. The $434 million Calaveras Dam project is part of SFPUC’s $4.6 billion regional Water System Improvement Program (WSIP) to upgrade aging pipelines, tunnels, and reservoirs in the Hetch Hetchy regional water system.

“The environmental review process required nearly seven years of collaboration with the environmental community and regulatory agencies,” said SFPUC General Manager Ed Harrington. “This inclusive effort resulted in a superior project that increases the seismic reliability and drought protection of the Hetch Hetchy water system, creates Bay Area construction jobs, and improves the environmental conditions for wildlife in Alameda Creek.”

The SFPUC Calaveras Dam Replacement project includes additional scheduled water releases, new fish passage projects, and improved watershed management monitoring. These projects are designed to assist in the restoration of steelhead trout in Alameda Creek and enhance the environment for native species like Yellow Legged and Red Legged Frogs.

The new reservoir project was advertised for bid on January 31 with a construction cost estimated at between $250 million and $300 million. Construction is anticipated to begin this summer and will require more than 814 thousand craft hours by laborers and basic crafts workers.

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