Report of the Secretary of the Army
on Civil Works Activities
for Fiscal Year 1991
Department of the Army Corps of Engineers
Extract Report of Walla Walla District
Preconstruction, Engineering, and Design
Little Wood River Project, Vicinity Gooding and Shoshone, Idaho
The Little Wood River Project was authorized by the Water Resource Development Act of 1986. The proposed project consists of a diversion channel and two ponding facilities to divert floodflows from the Little Wood River into adjacent lava fields via the Dietrich and Milner-Gooding Canals for the purpose of reducing flood damages in the Gooding and Shoshone, Idaho, vicinities. The estimated cost is $5,400,000.
Preconstruction engineering and design activities were initiated in FY 1990 to review and update the project formulation development for the 1976 feasibility report. A coordination meeting was held in Gooding, Idaho, on 29 May 1991 with the project sponsor. At that meeting, the sponsor indicated that they no longer have financial capability to act as project sponsor. As a result, the project is being terminated pending completion of a reevaluation report documenting the reformation studies completed to date.
FY 91 costs were $211,031.
McNary Lock and Dam (Second Powerhouse), Oregon and Washington
McNary Second Powerhouse is a proposed addition on the south shore of McNary Lock and Dam on the Columbia River near Umatilla, Oregon. The project will increase the present 980,000 kilowatt generating capacity by an additional 774,000 kilowatts. Provisions are included for compensation of negative impacts on fish and wildlife. The project is estimated to cost $667,000,000 at October 1, 1986 price levels.
The General Design Memorandum Phase I was prepared under the Water Resource Development Act of 1976, Public Law 94-587, and submitted to the Secretary of the Army on July 1, 1981.
Studies were initiated in FY 1982 and continued through FY 1984 on the General Design Memorandum Phase II and the Powerhouse Preliminary Design Report. There has been no further design activity on the project. The project was authorized for construction in the Water Resources Development Act of 1986.
The project, with the exception of levee beautification of the existing levees adjacent to Richland, Pasco, and Kennewick, Washington, will be eligible for automatic deauthorization on 16 November 1991, under Section 1001, PL 99-362. The levee beautification portion of the project was reauthorized by the Water Resource Development Act of 1990.
Zintel Canyon Dam, Washington
The proposed project consists of a roller compacted concrete dam 90 feet high, with uncontrolled spillway and a fixed maximum release outlet works that would create a detention reservoir of 1,260 acre-feet of capacity. The storage comprises 860 acre-feet for flood control and 400 acre-feet for sediment. In addition, the project also includes a conduit with a capacity of 400 cfs and a dike and floodgate across the Union Pacific Railroad to project downtown Kennewick, Washington. The plan of improvement will provide protection against heavy rainfall, snowmelt, and thunderstorm floods to the city of Kennewick, Washington.
Reevaluation of the project economics due to hydrology modifications resulted in a revised General Design Memo No. 2 and a Post-Authorization Change Report. The GDM was approved by the Washington Level Review Board on January 24, 1990. The Post-Authorization Change Report, which reduced the flood control storage of the authorized project and added a railroad floodgate, was approved March 5, 1990. FY 91 costs were $489,742. General Investigation funds for FY 91 in the amount of $185,718 were used for advanced E&D. Construction general funds of $304,024 were used for plans and specifications.
The total estimated Federal and non-Federal project cost is $10,854,000. The estimated Federal cost is $8,141,000.
Local cooperation. Non-Federal sponsors shall pay 25 percent of the total project cost, or an estimated $2,713,000.