Minor Back Bay dredging gets OK
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June Casagrande
NEWPORT BEACH -- Some Upper Newport Bay homeowners whose boats are
practically beached at low tide can now get permits to have their dock
areas dredged, the California Costal Commission has decided.
Since 1999, it has been virtually impossible to get a permit to dredge
silt and clay accumulations from near private docks in portions of the
Back Bay. This is because contaminants such as metals settle into the
silt and become a hazard when stirred up by dredging. In 2000, a renewal
of a permit the commission issues to the city required a study on the
presence of contaminants before any new permits could be issued.In the
meantime, silt has been building and building.
“Without being able to dredge, the use of your dock and the use of
your boat becomes less and less possible,” said Tony Melum, head of the
city’s Division of Harbor Resources.
In fact, according to a report Melum delivered to council, “Without
routine dredging, Upper Bay would ‘silt up’ to a marshland, with little
or no open water between Jamboree and Newport Dunes.”
The city completed the study and submitted an application to the
commission last summer. On March 5, commissioners finally signed off on
the request -- a welcome move for the owners of the approximately 1,200
private and commercial docks in the city.
“Homeowners with docks have been caught in the middle and we’ve been
working very hard to try and get this resolved for them,” said City
Councilman Steve Bromberg, whose district includes Balboa Island. “This
is a good thing for them.”
The Coastal Commission vote also helps advance the city’s goal of
dredging public navigational channels.
The Upper Newport Bay was last dredged in late 1998 and early 1999 --
a $7-million project that moved about 900,000 cubic yards of sediment
from public waterways.
Since then, the city has been working with the county, some
neighboring cities, water agencies and the Department of Fish and Game to
create a plan for major dredging by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The
$33-million project would move 2.7-million cubic yards of sediment from
the bay. The project, called the Upper Newport Bay Ecosystem Restoration
Project, would also restore some wildlife habitat, increase blue-water
views, move islands of least terns and open up several island channels to
the middle portion of the Upper Bay.
But federal budget constraints have thrown a wrench into the works.
Local officials are urging their Congressman, Chris Cox, to push for
authorization of the project.
* June Casagrande covers Newport Beach. She may be reached at (949)
574-4232 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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