UK emergency workers race to cut water levels at damaged dam
LONDON — Emergency workers raced Saturday to lower water levels behind a damaged dam in northwest England as forecasters warned more bad weather is on the way.
Pumps have reduced the water level in Toddbrook Reservoir by half a meter (20 inches) since Thursday, but authorities warn that pressure on the 180-year-old dam remains severe. A Royal Air Force helicopter continued precision drops of sandbags into a gaping hole on the dam, while specialist contractors placed concrete grouting around the bags to bind them together.
Images from the operation showed personnel hanging out of the side of the Chinook, directing the bags into the hole to fill gaps — like a craftsman smoothing plaster. Hundreds of one-ton bags had been dropped in the last few days, said Daniel Greenhalgh of the Canal & River Trust, which manages the dam.
“This is still a critical situation,” Greenhalgh told the BBC. “We need to draw the water down significantly.”