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<br />',. <br /> <br />~OED-HE <br />SUBJECT; <br /> <br />(1 Jul 82) <br />Evaluation <br />Colo.ado <br /> <br />29 September 1982 <br />of Potential Water Supply Storage at Chatfield Reservoir in <br /> <br />(~) Condition 3. The design assumptions for this condition were based <br />on sto.~ns a June standard project flood on top of a 25-year pool (20,000 acre- <br />ieet al.~dr ~n the flood pool) and 24,000 acre-feet of added storage due to a <br />10-<lar shutdown and stepped release operation. In the reevaluation of this condition <br />tne antecedent pool ,level was dropped to conservation level so that the level of <br />protection is comparable to that discussed in the beginning of this report. A <br />10-year, 10-day volume was selected as the inflow during the shutdown period and <br />stepped release operation. The results of this condition are also summarized in'the <br />following table. <br /> <br />Table 1 <br /> <br />Summary of Design Storage <br />Requirements for Conditions 1-3 <br /> <br />Condition 1 <br /> <br />Total <br /> <br />Desi~n ' Reevaluation <br />12,300 0 <br />130,000 130,000 <br />73.000 21.600 <br />215,300 151,600 <br />107,500 134,000 <br />28,000 4,000 <br />79.000 25.400 <br />214,500 163,400 <br />20,000 0 <br />160,000 160,000 <br />24.000 22.000 <br />204,000 182,000 <br /> <br />Spring Runoff into Storage (AF) <br />SPF Rain Flood (May) (AF) <br />Inflow During Shutdown & Stepped Release (AF) <br /> <br />Total <br /> <br />Condition 2 <br /> <br />500-year Spring Runoff Into Storage (AF) <br />Coincident Rain Flood (AF) <br />Inflow During Shutdown & Stepped Release (AF) <br /> <br />Total <br /> <br />Condit:ion 3 <br /> <br />Initial Flood Storage (AF) <br />SFP Rain Flood (June) (AF) <br />Inflow During Shutdown & Stepped Release (AF) <br /> <br />(4) When the results of' the reevaluation are compared it becomes'evident <br />that under the new assumptions Condition 3 becomes the critical factor in determin- <br />ing flood control storage requirements. On the basis of this' analYSiS we can say <br />that 33,000 acre-feet of excess flood storage has been provided in Chatfield. It <br />is important to reiterate that this is only so if the original design release <br />criteria is used. Experience has shown that releases less than 5000 cfs can <br />create problems downstream~ Furthermore, no consideration was given to coincident <br />releases from Cherry Creek and/or Bear Creek when the Chatfield design release <br />rate was selected. Therefore, any decision that needs to be made on storage <br />availability in either Chatfield or Bear Creek will necessarily have to wait <br />until our Denver reservoir system studies have been completed. <br /> <br />3 <br />