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For immediate release: 4/30/08
Floodwater release bulletin
- At 11 AM on Wednesday, April 30:
- Grand Lake elevation was 749.15 feet.
- Grand Lake flood control pool was at 38.6 percent capacity.
- At the direction of the United States Army Corps of Engineers, two (2) floodgates were open at Pensacola Dam, discharging 7,180 cubic feet per second (cfs) of water.
- Six (6) units were online at the Pensacola Dam powerhouse, releasing 14,142 cfs of water through generation.
- Releases through floodgates and generation totaled 21,322 cfs.
- Inflows into Grand Lake totaled 15,759 cfs.
- Lake Hudson elevation was 626.63 feet.
- Lake Hudson's flood control pool was at 38.08 percent capacity.
- At the direction of the United States Army Corps of Engineers, one (1) floodgate was open at Robert S. Kerr Dam, discharging 4,380 cfs of water.
- Three (3) units were online at Robert S. Kerr Dam powerhouse releasing 22,950 cfs of water through generation.
- Releases through floodgates and generation totaled 27,330 cfs.
- Inflows into Lake Hudson totaled 22,592 cfs.
The Grand River watershed consists of approximately 12,000 square miles of runoff in parts of Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma. Of that total, over half7,000 square milesis uncontrolled runoff, meaning there is no reservoir to control it above the Pensacola Dam. However, the remaining 5,000 square miles of runoff passes through the John Redmond Dam, located near Burlington, Kansas, prior to reaching the Grand River system in Oklahoma.
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