Tellico Dam
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Tellico Dam is a dam built by the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) in Loudon County, Tennessee on the Little Tennessee River just above the main stem of the Tennessee River. It impounds the Tellico Reservoir.
The dam was very controversial and is important because it marks a turning point in American attitudes toward dam construction. Until the 1960s and 1970s few questioned the value of building a dam; indeed, dams were considered to represent progress and technological prowess.[citation needed] During the twentieth century the United States built thousands of dams.[citation needed] By the 1950s most of the best potential dam sites in the United States had been utilized and it became increasingly harder to justify new dams, but government agencies such as TVA, the Bureau of Reclamation, and the Army Corps of Engineers continued to construct new dams. In the 1970s, the era of dam-building ended. The Tellico Dam case is illustrates America's changing attitudes toward dams and the environment.
Closing of the dam was delayed by dam opponents who used the Endangered Species Act of 1973. A small fish called the snail darter was discovered on the Little Tennessee River. Dam opponents succeeded in getting the fish listed as an endangered species and sued to stop the dam. The case made it to the Supreme Court of the United States. In 1978 the Supreme Court affirmed, by a 6-3 vote, an injunction issued by a lower court to stop construction of the dam. Citing explicit wording of the Endangered Species Act insuring habitat for listed species is not disrupted, the Court said "it is clear that the TVA's proposed operation of the dam will have precisely the opposite effect, namely the eradication of an endangered species."[1] In the ensuing controversy, the so-called "God Squad" was convened to issue a waiver for ESA protection of the snail darter. In a unanimous decision, the Committee refused an exemption of the Tellico Dam project. The chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisers later cited economic assessments that despite the Tellico Dam being 95% complete, "if one takes just the cost of finishing it against the benefits and does it properly, it doesn't pay, which says something about the original design."[citation needed]
After a long battle Congress finally exempted the Tellico Dam worth from the Endangered Species Act as an amendment in an unrelated bill. The gates were closed on the dam and Tellico Lake (a reservoir) began to form in 1979. Remnant populations of the snail darter were later located in other streams.[citation needed]
The dam flooded the locations of the 18th century Overhill Cherokee towns Chota, Tanasi, and Tuskegee. Fort Loudoun was excavated; dirt was deposited to raise the site 17 feet, and the fort was rebuilt in its original location.[citation needed]
Tellico Dam does not produce any electricity. However, the Tellico Dam complex directs almost all of the flow of the Little Tennessee River into a canal that enters the Tennessee River on the upstream side of Fort Loudoun Dam, thus adding to the hydropower capacity at that dam. [2]
Tellico Village and other lakefront residential communities have been built along the shores of Tellico Lake.
Land that was taken by eminent domain for under $500.00 per acre is now Tellico Village and Rarity Bay with Lots selling for upwards of half a million dollars
[edit] References
- ^ Decision in TVA v. Hill, U.S. Supreme Court, 437 U.S. 153, decided June 15, 1978
- ^ Jack Neely, Tellico Dam Revisited, Metropulse 14(50), December 9, 2004.
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