Officials working a long mooring shift
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Alicia Robinson
City officials are launching a plan to realign offshore moorings in
the harbor, a move harbor users are hoping won’t rock too many boats.
The more than 700 offshore boat moorings were originally set down
according to lines drawn by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers around
1940, but over the years the moorings have shifted because of weather
patterns, tidal action and maintenance activities. The city’s harbor
resources department has started preliminary work on a project
designed to get the moorings back in their designated boundaries.
This is the first time since the harbor was designed in 1936 that
officials have reevaluated the location of offshore moorings, said
Harbor Resources Supervisor Chris Miller. The need to move the
moorings came to light in October, when the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers refused to dredge part of the harbor until a number of
boats that were moored outside their demarcation lines were moved.
“This harbor really hasn’t been dredged properly since its
inception, so there hasn’t really been a need to look closely at it,”
Miller said. “The whole lower and upper bay needs to be dredged
eventually, so we thought it’d be a good idea to get everything
squared away for this dredging project.”
The mooring project will likely include getting the boat moorings
back within the proper lines as well as reorganizing moorings to more
efficiently use harbor space, which is at a premium.
“You wouldn’t want a 60-foot boat right next to a 30-foot boat,
because then you don’t have an even row,” Miller said. “Some people
will have to be relocated, but we’re really going to try and do our
best to keep everybody in the same general vicinity where they were.”
Mooring permits are issued by the city and aren’t supposed to be
sold by permit holders, so people generally attach them to the sale
of a boat. There’s about a 30-year waiting list for permits, which
can command from $20,000 to $40,000 depending on their size and
location, Miller said.
The Orange County Sheriff’s Harbor Patrol is working with the city
on the proposed rearrangement of moorings. The project will improve
safety for boaters in the harbor, Harbor Patrol Lt. Erin Giudice
said.
“There are some areas that are hard to access for us,” she said.
“Things are not like they are on the charts, and I guess when you’re
boating, you’re expecting things to be as the map or the chart says.”
Some who use the harbor, however, are questioning the project’s
benefits.
“It’s not as simple as just realigning moorings and boats,” said
Carter Ford, vice president of the Newport Mooring Assn., which
represents several hundred offshore mooring permit holders. “It’s a
matter of how the harbor works and how it meets the needs of all
these many different constituencies.”
Ford is concerned that moving the boats could widen some harbor
channels but narrow others, which he said won’t necessarily be safer.
“The jury’s still out, because we don’t have a lot of information
yet,” said Mark Sites, who is on the mooring association’s board and
has lived on his boat in the harbor for 28 years. “I think most
people want to make sure their moorings are in roughly the same
location.”
Boaters also are concerned that the annual fees charged for
mooring permits could increase because of the reshuffling, Sites
said. The last official increase in permit costs was about six years
ago, but the city has since changed the fee structure and just
recently allowed permit holders a final chance to enlarge their
mooring size -- which increases the cost -- before the boundaries are
moved, he said.
A consultant looking at the moorings might tell the city they’re
undervalued and suggest increasing the fees, Sites said.
The mooring study is in its beginning stages. The City Council
approved $106,000 for the project in the 2004-05 budget, but hiring
an engineer, studying the boundaries and collecting public input on
possible changes could take as long as a year, Miller said. While
that’s going on, city officials also will consider overhauling other
harbor regulations, such as whether mooring permit holders should be
required to keep a boat moored at all times.
Ford said it’s important to him that those who use the harbor are
included in the process from the beginning so everyone’s needs can be
met.
“I made a decision to move here 35 years ago because of this
harbor,” he said. “Change should be carefully considered.”
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