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BOR still assessing situation on siphon breach at St. Mary Diversion

Should not immediately impact water users down from Fresno Reservoir, will take at least a week to assess the situation

Updated 1:58 p.m. Tuesday, June 18, 2024

The Montana Area Office of the Bureau of Reclamation area manager said today the bureau is waiting for the water to finish flowing out of the breached siphons on the St. Mary Diversion and Conveyance Works and is working to get a feel for impacts caused by the breach and looking at possible models for replacement or partial repair.

“We’re currently in an analysis, data gathering stage and we’re going to be in that posture for at least a week before we can plot some paths forward,” Area Manager Ryan Newman said in an interview with Havre Weekly Chronicle.

He said a top priority right now is keeping people out of the area of the breech to maintain public safety.

“Our immediate response is to keep the public away and wait for the flow event to pass and the ground to dry up a little bit so we can actually get in there and start assessing our path forward,” Newman said.

The system, part of the Milk River Project authorized at the start of the last century, provides water for more than 120,000 acres of irrigated cropland and municipal water for Havre, Chinook and Harlem, as well as recreation on the Milk River and reservoirs that are part of the project like Fresno Reservoir west of Havre and Nelson Reservoir northeast of Malta.

Nelson said Fresno Reservoir right now is near full, and the breach should not have an immediate impact on the towns that use the water or the irrigators.

He said the breach was discovered Monday morning after BOR staff had already done an inspection and went back out and saw something didn’t look right.

One of the siphons — the system has two siphons — had burst, Newman said.

The breach was reported at 8:45 a.m. Monday.

BOR contacted the landowner below the siphon to let them know to move livestock, then set up a perimeter to keep people away so they would not be hurt.

He said water from the breach flooded the property known as Hook’s Hideaway, a motel hand horse boarding location on the St. Mary River below the siphon, but BOR is not aware of any injuries.

The siphon was running at its maximum amount of 600 cubic-feet-per-second when the breach occurred, Newman said. BOR staff immediately went to the diversion and turned off the diversion of water from the St. Mary River, but it is a nine-mile reach from the diversion to where the breach occurred. That water still had to flow through the system to the breach, he said.

The water coming from the siphon softened the ground and caused erosion, leading to the second siphon also breaching.

He said the water is likely finish running through by this afternoon, and then BOR will wait for the area to dry up so it can start doing a detailed assessment and start planning actions to take.

He said the possible actions would be a full replacement of the siphon — adding that that would not be likely this summer — or partial replacement or taking no action this summer.

He said BOR will be assessing how much water is available in the system including in Fresno and Nelson reservoirs.

He said this will be shortened irrigation season, although the recent rains have reduced demand at this point.

It will be at least a week before BOR can plot a path forward, Newman said.

Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont., said in a release today he has called on the Biden administration to provide additional support due the failure of the diversion.

“The timing of this failure could not be worse because hundreds of farmers and ranchers are currently depending on the Milk River Project to irrigate their crops,” Tester wrote in a letter to Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland and Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack. “This is a disaster that requires the immediate and full attention of the Department of Interior and the Department of Agriculture. I ask that you swiftly work to ensure that the local community and the irrigators have the resources they need to confront the challenges that lay ahead.”

Gov. Greg Gianforte said in a post Monday on X, formerly known as Twitter, that he was actively monitoring the situation and that the state is workin g with local and federal authorities to intensify the extent of damage to the surrounding area and to water users.

Sen. Steve Daines posted on X Monday that he is keeping in close contact with authorities and had contacted local irrigators as well, urning people to stay vigilant and stay away from the affected areas.

“The damage is serious, and I’m standing by to help local authorities in any way necessary,” he posted.

Rep. Matt Rosendale said in a release Monday that he had been in contact with the Milk River Project Joint Board of Control, adding that he was thankful no one was injured in the catastrophe.

 

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