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From:Clerk of the Board
To:Clerk of the Board; Connelly, Bill; Cook, Holly; Cook, Robin; Durfee, Peter; Jessee, Meegan; Kimmelshue, Tod;
Kitts, Melissa; Krater, Sharleen; Lee, Lewis; Little, Melissa; Pickett, Andy; Ritter, Tami; Stephens, Brad J.;
Sweeney, Kathleen; Teeter, Doug; Zepeda, Elizabeth
Cc:Loeser, Kamie; Nuzum, Danielle
Subject:Board Correspondence - FW: Lake Oroville Community Update - September 26, 2025
Date:Friday, September 26, 2025 3:32:18 PM
Please see Board Correspondence -
From: California Natural Resources Agency <CNRA@public.govdelivery.com>
Sent: Friday, September 26, 2025 2:40 PM
To: Clerk of the Board <clerkoftheboard@buttecounty.net>
Subject: Lake Oroville Community Update - September 26, 2025
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Lake Oroville Community Update
September 26, 2025
Oroville Salmon Festival
Join the Department of Water Resources (DWR) at the Oroville Salmon Festival on
Saturday, Sept. 27! Visit our booth at the Feather River Fish Hatchery from 9 a.m. to 3
p.m. We will have educational materials on water safety, a salmon gyotaku fish printing
activity, and a photo opportunity. DWR Guides will also be giving free tours of the
Hatchery, where DWR and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) raise
Chinook salmon and steelhead to improve fish populations throughout the state.
Other Salmon Festival activities include Motor Mania, Salmon Run, a food and beer
garden, Kid’s Zone, and numerous shopping opportunities and vendor booths in
videos about efforts to support vital salmon habitat restoration, fish health, and population
growth.
View the full Salmon Festival schedule at Visit Oroville.
Routine Spillway Cleaning and Inspections Underway
Following another wet winter requiring flood control releases from Oroville Dam’s main
spillway DWR has started cleaning the concrete spillway chute. Members of the public
should expect to see crews using pressure washers, brooms, and small cleaning
equipment, followed by engineers traversing the spillway on foot conducting routine
annual inspections through Oct. 10.
Annual inspections of the main spillway are conducted by DWR engineers. During the
inspections, engineers assess the condition of the spillway’s concrete slabs, walls, joint
sealant, and dentates (energy dissipators at the base of the spillway structure). Routine
maintenance activities are expected this fall based on inspection results and reservoir
levels.
The main spillway continues to perform well and operate as designed. The spillway was
rebuilt to the highest engineering and safety standards with oversight and guidance by the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), Division of Safety of Dams (DSOD), and
an independent board of consultants. DWR performed extensive inspection and testing
throughout construction to verify compliance with project specifications. DWR also
provides regular updates to the Oroville Dam Citizens Advisory Commission, a public
forum for discussing operations, maintenance, and public safety activities at Oroville Dam
and its facilities.
Lakeside Access Road Now Open
Lake Oroville’s water elevation has lowered enough to allow DWR to reopen the Lakeside
Access Road, providing daily access to the Spillway Boat Ramp and Day Use Area
between 7:30 a.m. and 9 p.m. These hours are consistent with DWR’s invasive mussel
screening program. Construction of Lakeside Access Road was completed in 2022 and
provides a direct route to the Spillway Day Use Area from Oroville Dam Crest Road
without requiring visitors to pass through California Highway Patrol (CHP) screening. The
CHP kiosk will now be closed with Lakeside Access Road’s reopening.
Paving and Sealing Work Ongoing
DWR continues work on a $1.9 million paving and sealing project to rehabilitate seven
locations owned and maintained by the department that are heavily used by maintenance
staff and public members. Project work is expected to continue through November 2025.
Vintage Paving Company, Inc. of Winters, Calif. is the contractor for the project.
Upcoming construction work will require closures to the following public areas:
Aug. 18 – Oct. 31: Afterbay Dam Crest Road/Brad Freeman Trail south of State
Route 162 to the East Hamilton Road Trail Access
Additional locations for future paving, sealing, and guardrail work include:
Thermalito Powerplant Access Roads
Thermalito Diversion Dam Powerplant
Oroville Field Division Operations and Maintenance Center at Glen Drive
Canyon Drive from the intersection of Oroville Dam Blvd. E./Royal Oaks Drive
heading north to the dam and upper overlook
Oroville Dam Boulevard East near Oro Powerhouse Road
DWR will provide more details about scheduled work and potential public access impacts
in future newsletters. Work schedules are subject to change based on weather and the
availability of equipment and materials.
Golden Mussel Inspection Program
More details about DWR’s mussel inspection program are available at
water.ca.gov/mussels.
Watercraft Inspection Location/Decontamination Services
North Thermalito Forebay at Garden Drive and HWY 70 in Oroville
Hours of operation: Daily from 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Sealed Vessel Launching
Lake Oroville
Ramp hours: Daily from 7:30 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Spillway
Bidwell Canyon
Extended Ramp hours: Daily from 5 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Lime Saddle
Loafer Creek
Thermalito Afterbay
Ramp hours: Daily from 1.5 hours before sunrise to 1 hour after sunset
Monument Hill
Thermalito Forebay
Ramp Hours: Daily from 8 a.m. to sunset
North Forebay (Non-motorized vessels only)
Feather River Fish Monitoring Station
Between Jan. 30 and April 20, high flows in the Feather River required the temporary
removal of fish monitoring equipment resulting in lower spring-run estimates. Upstream
migrating fish totals through the Feather River Fish Monitoring Station between Jan. 1 and
Sept. 21, 2025 are:
Spring-run Chinook salmon (April 16 through June 30): 17,738
Fall-run Chinook salmon (July 1 through present): 2,682
Steelhead: 328
To see previous year data, visit CalFish.org.
Current Lake Operations
Lake Oroville is at 802 feet elevation and storage is approximately 2.13 million acre-feet
(MAF), which is 62 percent of its total capacity and 110 percent of the historical average.
Feather River flows are at 650 cubic feet per second (cfs) through the City of Oroville with
7,350 cfs being released from the Thermalito Afterbay River Outlet (Outlet) for a total
Feather River release of 8,000 cfs downstream. DWR continues to assess Feather River
releases daily.
The public can track precipitation, snow, reservoir levels, and more at the California Data
Exchange Center. The Lake Oroville gage station is identified as “ORO.”
All data as of 11:59 p.m. on 9/25/2025.
California Department of Water Resources
715 P Street
Sacramento, CA 95814
Call our general information line at 916-820-8142
or email us at oroville@water.ca.gov
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