Back Bay dredging cries heard in D.C.
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June Casagrande
Mayor Tod Ridgeway’s warm reception in Washington, D.C., last week
has him hopeful that the federal government will set aside cash for
dredging the Back Bay.
“People in Washington and many in Congress understand our
dilemma,” Ridgeway said. “They know our Back Bay ecological preserve
project and know why it’s so important.”
Ridgeway was in the nation’s capital wearing two distinctly
different hats. He had planned the trip as a representative of the
Orange County Sanitation District to attend a meeting with water and
sanitation officials.
At that meeting, members of a California delegation met with
congressional leaders to push for $10 million in funding for the
sanitation district to put wastewater through a higher level of
treatment before discharging it. Capitalizing on his presence in
Washington, D.C., Ridgeway arranged meetings with U.S. Reps.
Christopher Cox, Dana Rohrabacher and Loretta Sanchez (D-Anaheim) and
U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein.
In separate meetings, he delivered to the representatives copies
of a letter signed by seven local leaders imploring congressional
leaders to follow through on funding for Back Bay dredging. The
mayors of Costa Mesa, Santa Ana, Tustin, Irvine and Lake Forest, as
well as county Supervisors Jim Silva and Tom Wilson supported
Newport’s cause by signing the letter.
Their hope is to get the Army Corps of Engineers to budget about
$15 million this year for dredging the Back Bay, part of a
$24.5-million project the city has been counting on the federal
government to fund. Local leaders were alarmed recently when they
learned that the president’s proposed budget did not contain money
for the dredging in the Army Corps of Engineers budget. They
expected the funding to be in the budget because the Army Corps had
already approved and begun funding the project last year. Now the
city is banking on the appropriations process to get the money.
“Without dredging, the Upper Newport Bay would turn into a muddy
marshland and lose all its open water habitat value,” said Assistant
City Manager Dave Kiff, who explained that the open water areas of
the Back Bay provide rare and vital habitat for endangered species
such as the bird known as the clapper rail. The Back Bay is the only
known nesting ground for this endangered bird, Kiff said.
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
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