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Latest comment: 7 years ago3 comments2 people in discussion
Resolved
The Five Pillars of Wikipedia WP:PILLARS clearly states in the fifth pillar WP:5P5 that Wikipedia has no firm rules and the policies and guidelines "are not carved in stone". So, for that reason, I believe this article should remain safe from deletion and allowed to continue to be edited and updated as more information comes to light. Currently, the page is flagged for deletion because the original version lacked secondary sources and, as a man-made geographical location it "may not necessarily be notable". I have added the page's first secondary source in the form of an article from the Adirondack Journal, thus protecting the article from it's first violation of the guidelines. And, in light of current events - namely New York Gov. Cuomo's announced plan to close the Indian Point nuclear power plant and the developing debate over New York's state-wide energy debate - I believe that hydroelectric dams (and other renewable energy sources) are going to become increasingly discussed and will become, as man-made geographical locations, more notable. An example of this developing notoriety, and creation of future secondary sources, can be found in the research of Jill Hubley (link to her page: http://jillhubley.com/), who is developing an interactive research project on the safety of all of New York States dams. When her research is published it can be added to, as a secondary source, to all of New York's dams. Deleting this article will negatively effect the ongoing debate and contemporary research currently being undertaken by individuals interested in the debate over renewable energy within their communities. CarlsonC (talk) 22:28, 9 January 2017 (UTC)Reply
Good points – I couldn't find a secondary source, so this is fair enough. Please try to find more secondary sources, however, since all articles should have multiple secondary sources. I wouldn't particularly argue that Wikipedia stubs have any effect on renewable energy debates, but whatever. -- Pingumeister(talk)18:57, 10 January 2017 (UTC)Reply
It's resolved then that we will leave the page in place and continue to add and edit secondary sources as they become available. I've started a dialogue with the Warrensburg Historical Society and will hopefully be able to bring some of their sources to the article in due time. CarlsonC (talk) 04:56, 18 January 2017 (UTC)Reply
Latest comment: 7 years ago1 comment1 person in discussion
The NID has released their information for this dam (url to report: http://nid.usace.army.mil/cm_apex/f?p=838:4:0::NO). I'm not sure how to incorporate the specs of the dam (height, width, etc) into the info box. If someone knew how to do that, and wanted to incorporate that information into the article, the research is already done, I just don't know how to publish it.
NID Height (Ft.) 27.5,
Dam Length (Ft.) 288,
Dam Height (Ft.) 27,
Structural Height (Ft.) 22.5,
Hydraulic Height (Ft.) 27.5,
Spillway Type C,
Spillway Width 200,
NID Storage 500,
Max Discharge 9200,
Max Storage 500,
Drainage Area 554