MANKATO — The Rapidan Dam, about 12 miles southwest of here, is in “imminent failure condition,” Blue Earth County officials warned early Monday.
Hours later, the west bank of the century-old dam had already washed out, along with several nearby buildings, sending construction material and trees downstream, as the Blue Earth River continued to rise after heavy rains fell on the region over the last several days.
“The dam could fail,” Eric Weller, Blue Earth County emergency management director, said Monday.
The river level at the dam is at 28 feet, with water expected to rise another foot or so over the next 24 to 36 hours before cresting, said Jeff Johnson, director of public works for Mankato. The dam is built to hold 39.5 feet of water, Johnson said. The dam, on the Blue Earth River, hasn’t generated power in more than five years and is now owned by the county.
There is no current plan for a mass evacuation and everyone deemed to be in danger has already been notified and many have evacuated, officials said.
Brush and sediment rerouted the pathway of the river, causing water to go around the dam, Rep. Brad Finstad said in a press conference about the flooding Monday afternoon.
“The water is raging, and it’s just cutting the shoreline away,” Finstad said. “It is the power of Mother Nature, when you see a rain like this, and we have a lot of questions behind that dam.”
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) inspected the dam on May 21, and found the plant was in “overall satisfactory condition” and had no major problems that required immediate action.