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Dam monitoring center in Montana helps protect communities with early warnings

National dam monitoring center helps protect communities with early warnings
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RONAN — A small team of 11 employees in Ronan is playing a major role in keeping communities safe across the West and the nation by monitoring dams around the clock.

The Bureau of Indian Affairs National Monitoring Center tracks scrores of dams — 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Watch Robyn Wayne's report here:

National dam monitoring center in Ronan helps protect communities with early warnings

The monitored sites stretch across the western United States to Alaska, and as far away as the Pushmataha Dam on the Choctaw Indian Reservation in Mississippi, located 1,600 miles from the Ronan facility.

From the agency website:

Oversees the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes Reservation’s 15 high-hazard dams with regular instrumentation data collection, inspections and performance evaluations to identify and implement maintenance activities as well as address necessary improvements leading to rehabilitation and betterment projects associated with the CSKT Water Compact. In addition, SOD oversees the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) National Monitoring Center (NMC) provides early detection and notification of unsafe conditions at 141 BIA High-Hazard dams.

"We utilize internet and websites to remotely monitor 140 dams across the nation," Ambrose Cook-Saloway said.

Cook-Saloway is the program manager for the National Monitoring Center. The facilities monitored by the program, such as Mission Dam in St. Ignatius, are not hydroelectric dams generating power.

Instead, the center uses sensors and cameras to track water elevation levels, providing critical data that could save lives when conditions change.

"The notifications we provide are put in place so we can provide before emergencies happen, we are part of an early warning system," Cook-Saloway said.

The goal of the program is prevention.

"When we see a change in local dams we will promptly notify them and get ahold of them directly," Cook-Saloway said.

The monitoring center represents one part of the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes' broader mission to protect their waters.

"What you really get enjoyment out of, is knowing you are doing something for communities," Cook-Saloway said. "It is a real sense of pride being able to say hey we helped this community remain safe today."

Click here to visit the agency's website.