Not Built For This #5: The Little Levee That Could

不是为此而建的#5:小堤坝可以

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艺术

2024-09-03

48 分钟
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How the residents of Hamilton City, California finally got the levee they deserved.

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  • This is episode five of Not Built for this, the little levee that could.

  • The year I moved to California, it barely rained at all.

  • It was 2015, and the local news was doing lots of stories about taking shorter showers and how much water it takes to grow a single almond.

  • For most of my time in the state, California has been hovering somewhere between extreme and exceptional drought conditions.

  • But then came the winter of 2023.

  • The rain started on New Year's Eve.

  • At first it was relieving, exciting even to see the dry creek beds spring to life and the sun baked hills behind my house get a good soak.

  • But then the water just kept coming.

  • The storms went on for weeks on end until we had too much of a good thing.

  • Many rivers in Northern California flooded that winter, inundating communities that only a few months earlier had been praying for rain.

  • The new scientific consensus is that California needs to prepare for both drought and deluge as the climate changes.

  • Meteorologists have settled on the phrase weather whiplash to describe the bewildering snap from one extreme to the other.

  • Many of the towns that felt the sting of the weather whip were low income agricultural communities.

  • Towns like Planada and Allensworth and Pajaro, where a river broke through an old levee and displaced over 3,000 people.

  • Following those floods, there were a lot of questions about the capacity of the state's aging water infrastructure to handle supercharged storms and about who pays the price when that infrastructure fails.

  • But our story today is about another flood prone farm worker town in California, one that actually managed to stay safe and dry during the big storms of 2023.

  • It's called Hamilton City, and it's a small unincorporated community built along the Sacramento river in California's Central Valley.

  • For decades, the only thing protecting Hamilton City from the river was one of the worst levees in the entire state.

  • This crumbling mound of dirt was built right up against the bank, and it was full of holes.

  • You know, it was literally like somebody had put a big block of Swiss cheese along the river because it was so full of, you know, squirrels and other ground animals that just were always burrowing.