The United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) partnered with Salt Lake County in the early 1960’s to increase the Surplus Canal’s capacity using levees.
Federal oversight of levees increased following Hurricane Katrina and the catastrophic failures in the New Orleans levees in 2005. In 2012, USACE conducted a Levee Safety Program Periodic Inspection of the Surplus Canal and identified many deficiencies. In the subsequent 2017 USACE inspection, more than 300 deficiencies were identified and categorized as unacceptable. As a result, the Surplus Canal was delisted by USACE. SLCo is working to address these deficiencies. As a result of the 2012/2017 USACE inspections, a large portion of the west side of Salt Lake City could be mapped by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) into a special flood hazard area. If FEMA maps this area as a floodplain, property owners with a mortgage would likely be required to purchase flood insurance. Additionally, the area would not be eligible for federal recovery funding if it floods while it is delisted.
Through the Surplus Levee Deficiency Rehabilitation Project, SLCo Flood Control is working to bring the Surplus Levees back into USACE compliance. To do so, the Surplus Levee Deficiency Rehabilitation Project must address the unacceptable encroachment violations, including those on property that is privately owned. We are working to:
- Determine all encroachments on property currently owned by the County or other government entities
- Acquire property within 10 feet of the land-side toe of the levee
- Relocate fences outside USACE jurisdiction
- Remove all encroachments on the newly acquired property.