Sand sites set to shift in Newport
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Alicia Robinson
The sandy beach between 32nd and 56th streets will grow when a
contractor begins bringing sediment from the Santa Ana River next
month.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is heading a project to dredge
400,000 cubic yards of sediment from the river and use it to
replenish the beach in West Newport.
The $4.5-million project is part of a $1.4-billion mainly
federally funded overhaul of the Santa Ana River. Orange County is
chipping in at least 5% of the money, and Newport Beach is involved
in the project but isn’t sharing in the cost.
The project will reach from Adams Avenue to the beach. A
contractor hired by the corps, Santa Ana-based CJW, has begun
collecting sediment upstream but won’t work south of Coast Highway
until after Sept. 8 to protect the endangered least tern’s nesting
season, said Tom Rossmiller, the city’s harbor resources manager.
Some residents have expressed concern about the effects of the
project and whether it’s needed, but Rossmiller said the sand
replacement helps protect the beach, which loses about half a foot of
width a year according to a study by the corps.
Once the sediment is collected, it will either all be hauled onto
the beach in dump trucks and spread out, or some of it will be pumped
offshore to be washed back in to the beach by waves, Rossmiller said.
The work will take place weekdays from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. between Sept.
8 and Dec. 18.
Some beach access points will be closed during the work and the
bike trail will be closed from Victoria Street to Coast Highway, but
the beach will remain open outside the work area.
“It will restrict some of the use, but it will not stop the use,”
corps project engineer Fernando Cano said. “The beach will be
accessible.”
The sand’s deposit site is one of several concerns Seashore Drive
resident Jim Brooks has about the project. He said he’s talked with
neighbors and beach users worried about how much bigger the
additional sand will make the beach and how that will affect surfers
and swimmers used to current wave patterns.
“When you have [changing wave patterns], we lose this very
important element that gives character to the Newport beach area,” he
said.
He’s also worried the sand will contain silt, trash and other
debris that make it through filters.
Beach replenishment commonly uses up to 20% silt and other
non-sand materials, Rossmiller said, but this project will allow less
than 15% silt and clay. He plans to ask the City Council for approval
to hire a sand expert to ensure the quality of what’s deposited on
the city’s beach.
An informational meeting on the beach-replenishment project is set
for 7 p.m. Aug. 18 in the council chambers at Newport Beach City
Hall, 3300 Newport Blvd.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
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