Opinion - Public safety crisis: Budget cuts may cause US dams to fail
Across the nation, dams are deteriorating while the storms pounding against them grow stronger and more frequent. The result: A growing number of disasters and an unacceptable level of flood risk for downstream communities.
Lives, homes and livelihoods hang in the balance, even as dam safety oversight and funding are being eliminated in the current Congress.
May 31 is National Dam Safety Awareness Day — a moment to remember the people who have died in dam failures and to urge action to ensure no more lives are lost in unnecessary and avoidable catastrophes. It should also be a wake-up call. The threat is not theoretical, it is reality. And the harsh reality is, it is getting worse and our elected leaders have yet to respond.
There are more than half a million dams obstructing rivers and streams in all 50 states and in almost every community. Ownership and associated liability in the event of dam-breaks spans private owners, localities, states and the federal government, which controls some of the largest and most dangerous dams.
Dams are infrastructure, and infrastructure fails. When dams fail, a wall of water surges downstream, destroying everything in its path. In the U.S. alone, thousands have died from dam failures. Even low head dams — smaller dams that typically have water continuously flowing over the dam crest — can be deadly, having entrapped and drowned 1,400 people in their hydraulic churn over the years.
Dam failures are not tragedies of the distant past. Nearly 80 percent of emergency incidents and dam failures have occurred in the last 20 years. In 2019, for example, the Spencer Dam in Nebraska failed during a winter storm and drowned a man. Just last year the Rapidan Dam in Minnesota failed during a flood, swallowing a riverside home. The dam was known to be in a state of disrepair, and the dam owner had been weighing the decision to repair or remove the structure.
Hurricane Helene, which dumped an unprecedented amount of rainfall onto the Southeast, pushed dams beyond their limit. Dozens of state-regulated dams failed or were severely damaged in record-breaking flooding. Many others were further degraded — leaving them compromised as the 2025 hurricane season begins.
The majority of our nation's dams are beyond their design lifespan. With the average age across the nation surpassing six decades, it should be unsurprising that they were not built to withstand the storm and flood intensities that we are seeing now. Many are accidents just waiting to happen, especially as the funding and staff that maintain or upgrade these antiquated structures are being cut.
The U.S. has put far too little investment into fixing this underappreciated public safety crisis, leading the American Society of Civil Engineers to give our dams a grade of D+. And a failing grade may well be around the corner.
In the last two years, Congress has made major cuts to dam safety programs at dam-owning agencies and massive cuts to the Federal Emergency Management Agency National Dam Safety Program funding. This program provides critical support to state dam safety offices and for dam owners voluntarily seeking to repair or remove dams with high hazard potential. The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law of 2021 provided an influx of funds, but more than half of those dedicated funds were subsequently cut in the 2024 and 2025 spending bills.
Restoring and sustaining sufficient funding and staffing to the FEMA National Dam Safety Program is crucial to addressing the dam safety crisis. Lack of funding will leave communities, regardless of who they voted for, having to pay the price when dams break.
At the state level, dam safety offices need the staffing, funding and programmatic infrastructure to hold dam owners responsible for the safety of their dams. Loopholes that allow some dam owners — even those owning high-hazard dams — to avoid safety regulation, must be closed. Unsafe dams that are not serving a critical purpose should be removed, and funding should be made available to support those removals.
It is currently estimated that it would cost $165 billion to rehabilitate all non-federal dams. The longer dams are allowed to deteriorate, the higher that price tag grows.
However, as the adage goes, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. More than half of dams on the landscape are obsolete, no longer serving the purpose they were built to provide. An investment to remove them instead of patching them up for another day may be a cost-efficient way of eliminating safety risks and expediently restoring water quality, wildlife habitat and recreational opportunities.
Our nation's outdated 20th Century dams are buckling under 21st century weather extremes. They are quickly becoming ticking time bombs without the budget to diffuse them. This is not just an infrastructure issue — it is a public safety emergency. And Congress is on the verge of failing its most basic responsibility: to protect the American people.
Members of Congress need to put public safety first and approve dedicated funding for the regular upkeep, rehabilitation and removal of dams.
Tom Kiernan is president and CEO of American Rivers.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Axios
an hour ago
- Axios
Exclusive: HHS watchdog finds more than $16B in health savings
The Department of Health and Human Services' watchdog identified more than $16 billion in overpayments, fraudulent billings and possible cost savings in health programs over a half year spanning the Biden and Trump administrations, including more than $3.5 billion to be returned to the government. Why it matters: The semiannual summary, first shared publicly to Axios, comes as the Trump administration says it's prioritizing government efficiency and rooting out waste, fraud and abuse. It reflects growing concern over federal payments to Medicare Advantage plans, along with enforcement actions like McKinsey agreeing to pay $650 million to settle charges that its advice caused Purdue Pharma to submit fraudulent claims stemming from the opioid crisis. The report was sent to Congress late Friday. By the numbers: The HHS Office of Inspector General identified $16.6 billion in real and potential savings from October 2024 through March of this year. The office's investigations identified $3.5 billion in funds due back to the federal government, and its audits found another $451 million that the government will recoup. More than $12 billion in potential cost savings were identified if HHS makes recommended policy changes. The office issued 165 recommendations over the six months. In one example, OIG found that Medicare could have saved $7.7 billion if it lowered payments for swing beds at critical access hospitals so that they match skilled nursing facilities. The change would require action from Congress, and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services said it didn't agree with the recommendation. Nearly 400 civil actions, including settlements, resulted from OIG's work during the period. OIG says its work returned $11 to the federal government for each $1 invested in its office. "Whether it's us, whether it's [the Government Accountability Office], whether it's DOGE, whether it's state auditors, there's always a need for program integrity and oversight," said John Hagg, assistant inspector general in the IG's office of audit services. Zoom in: OIG over the six months covered in the report continued its investigations that raise concerns over improper payments in Medicare Advantage. OIG found that many patient diagnoses reported by privately run Medicare plans were supported only through health risk assessments. That allowed plans to be paid more to care for sicker, more expensive patients without enough supporting documentation, raising questions about their validity, per OIG. OIG recommended that Medicare further restrict plans' abilities to get higher payments based on diagnoses reported only on in-home health risk assessments in order to save an estimated $4.2 billion for Medicare. The office plans to do more work on Medicare Advantage in the near future, Melicia Seay, assistant inspector general in the office of evaluation and inspection, told Axios. "There's a lot of areas in terms of Medicare Advantage that we're exploring, whether it is the payment policy related to the program, the service delivery, quality of care," she said. Catch up quick: President Trump in January abruptly fired several agency inspectors general, including longtime HHS watchdog Christi Grimm. He claimed that"some were not doing their job."
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Dem Congressman Blasts 'Deeply Troubling' DHS Handcuffing Of Staffer In New York Office
Agents from the Department of Homeland Security handcuffed a staffer in Rep. Jerry Nadler's New York office last Wednesday, according to a statement the Congressman posted on X. The incident was also captured on video, which was obtained by Gothamist. In the video, a DHS agent can be seen handcuffing a staffer who is distressed and crying. A second agent is seen attempting to enter another room in the office, which is occupied by a second staff member. That staffer then asks if he has a warrant and the agent says he doesn't need one, and accuses the office of 'harboring rioters.' Nadler raised alarm about DHS's conduct, noting that 'no arrests were made' and that 'the situation was quickly de-escalated,' but that it was disturbing that the incident took place at all. 'The decision to enter a Congressional office and detain a staff member demonstrates a deeply troubling disregard for proper legal boundaries,' Nadler wrote. 'If this can happen in a Member of Congress's office, it can happen to anyone–and is happening.' In its statement regarding the incident, a senior DHS official told HuffPost that members of the Federal Protective Service 'responded to information that protesters were present inside U.S. Rep. Jerry Nadler's District Office in Manhattan, New York.' That statement also claimed that agents visited the office to 'ensure the safety and well-being of those present' due to 'earlier incidents in a nearby facility.' The statement does not reference remarks that the DHS agent made about the office 'harboring rioters,' and has been contested by Nadler's chief of staff Robert Gottheim, who has called it a 'total fabrication and lie.' 'DHS's statement that they were coming in for a safety check doesn't mesh with the video,' Gottheim told The New York Daily News, adding that the staffer who was handcuffed is 'traumatized.' Nadler's Manhattan office is located in the same building as an immigration court where DHS agents were also detaining immigrants that day, The New York Times reports. Gottheim told The Times that staffers witnessed these confrontations and invited immigration advocates to the office, which upset DHS agents. 'Upon arrival, officers were granted entry and encountered four individuals,' the DHS official said. 'Officers identified themselves and explained their intent to conduct a security check, however, one individual became verbally confrontational and physically blocked access to the office. The officers then detained the individual in the hallway for the purpose of completing the security check. All were released without further incident.' DHS agents' detention of Nadler's staffer follows multiple cases of federal law enforcement penalizing Democratic leaders. Previously, ICE officers arrested Newark Mayor Ras Baraka while he was visiting a New Jersey detention facility. And New Jersey's federal prosecutor has also charged Democratic Rep. LaMonica McIver (D-NJ) with assault over her alleged actions at the facility during that same visit. Nadler condemned the 'aggressive and heavy-handed tactics' employed by DHS against his office and immigrants in general in his statement. 'Trump and the Department of Homeland Security are sowing chaos in our communities,' he wrote.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Dem Congressman Blasts 'Deeply Troubling' DHS Handcuffing Of Staffer In New York Office
Agents from the Department of Homeland Security handcuffed a staffer in Rep. Jerry Nadler's New York office last Wednesday, according to a statement the Congressman posted on X. The incident was also captured on video, which was obtained by Gothamist. In the video, a DHS agent can be seen handcuffing a staffer who is distressed and crying. A second agent is seen attempting to enter another room in the office, which is occupied by a second staff member. That staffer then asks if he has a warrant and the agent says he doesn't need one, and accuses the office of 'harboring rioters.' Nadler raised alarm about DHS's conduct, noting that 'no arrests were made' and that 'the situation was quickly de-escalated,' but that it was disturbing that the incident took place at all. 'The decision to enter a Congressional office and detain a staff member demonstrates a deeply troubling disregard for proper legal boundaries,' Nadler wrote. 'If this can happen in a Member of Congress's office, it can happen to anyone–and is happening.' In its statement regarding the incident, a senior DHS official told HuffPost that members of the Federal Protective Service 'responded to information that protesters were present inside U.S. Rep. Jerry Nadler's District Office in Manhattan, New York.' That statement also claimed that agents visited the office to 'ensure the safety and well-being of those present' due to 'earlier incidents in a nearby facility.' The statement does not reference remarks that the DHS agent made about the office 'harboring rioters,' and has been contested by Nadler's chief of staff Robert Gottheim, who has called it a 'total fabrication and lie.' 'DHS's statement that they were coming in for a safety check doesn't mesh with the video,' Gottheim told The New York Daily News, adding that the staffer who was handcuffed is 'traumatized.' Nadler's Manhattan office is located in the same building as an immigration court where DHS agents were also detaining immigrants that day, The New York Times reports. Gottheim told The Times that staffers witnessed these confrontations and invited immigration advocates to the office, which upset DHS agents. 'Upon arrival, officers were granted entry and encountered four individuals,' the DHS official said. 'Officers identified themselves and explained their intent to conduct a security check, however, one individual became verbally confrontational and physically blocked access to the office. The officers then detained the individual in the hallway for the purpose of completing the security check. All were released without further incident.' DHS agents' detention of Nadler's staffer follows multiple cases of federal law enforcement penalizing Democratic leaders. Previously, ICE officers arrested Newark Mayor Ras Baraka while he was visiting a New Jersey detention facility. And New Jersey's federal prosecutor has also charged Democratic Rep. LaMonica McIver (D-NJ) with assault over her alleged actions at the facility during that same visit. Nadler condemned the 'aggressive and heavy-handed tactics' employed by DHS against his office and immigrants in general in his statement. 'Trump and the Department of Homeland Security are sowing chaos in our communities,' he wrote.