[FONT="]Maybe the Oroville Dam was cursed from the start.[/FONT]
[FONT="]In December 1964, three years into the massive barriers construction, a huge flood struck the northwest, killing dozens. The dam was nearly overtopped, which could have led to its failure even before it was completed. Instead, the partially completed dam helped prevent a larger disaster by
reducing the flow of the Feather River. Less than a year later, two trains working on the site collided head-on in a tunnel near the dam, killing four men in a fiery crash and damaging the tunnel, slowing down work on the project.
A drop of water that starts at Lake Oroville, above the dam, takes 10 days to move all the way to the end of the system, south of Los Angeles.
American Society of Civil Engineers conducted its most recent quadrennial survey of the nations infrastructure, and it gave the U.S. a D for maintenance of dams.
More existing dams in the U.S. were built in the 1960s, like the Oroville Dam, than in any other decade. The combination of aging dams, bad maintenance, and spotty inspections means that what looks like a trickle of worry out of Lake Oroville and over the dams fragile spillways could turn into a gusher of danger around the U.S. in the coming years.............
https://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2017/02/how-did-the-oroville-dam-get-so-bad/516429/[/FONT]